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International Yearbook of Futurism Studies
Günter Berghaus, ed. "Women Artists and Futurism." Special Issue, International Yearbook of Futurism Studies, Volume 5. Berlin: de Gruyter, 2015. Pp. xii + 676. $182.00 (cloth).
Of the many controversial slogans and apodictic assertions contained in Filippo Tommaso Marinetti's 1909 "The Founding and Manifesto of Futurism," few have endured as a continuous source of heated debate and polemic as has the famous call for "le mépris de la femme," already targeted by the earliest critics of the movement. Traditionally seen as a cardinal component of an aggressive rhetoric that would find its ultimate fulfillment in fascism, the question of this "scorn for women"-along with the equally controversial exaltation of war as "the sole cleanser of the world"-contributed in no small part to keeping Futurism on the margins of modernist studies until quite recently.1 At the same time, over the last twenty-five years-one might take Lucia Re's influential 1989 essay "Futurism and Feminism" as the watershed-a closer engagement both with male Futurists' writings on women and with the works by women writers and artists who aligned themselves with the movement has helped to provide a more complex and nuanced picture of the situation, at least for Italian Futurism.2 (Barbara Meazzi offers a useful and thorough overview of the scholarship on women and Italian Futurism in her contribution to the volume under review. )
This issue of the International Yearbook of Futurism Studies, edited by the journal's director, Günter Berghaus, aims at expanding the range of this enquiry to consider the influence of Futurism on women artists, writers, and intellectuals across Europe and beyond. As Berghaus remarks in his introduction, that influence should not be measured only in terms of the relative adherence or response to the aesthetic and social orthodoxy formulated in the many manifestoes of the movement, but also by considering the role played in the artists' formation by a much looser understanding of Futurism based on the "scattered information" and the "more or less denigrating, satirical or scandal-mongering articles" provided by mainstream newspaper and periodicals, for which Futurism quickly became a synonym of "Modernism gone mad" (ix). For several of the women considered in this volume, the antitraditionalist ethos of Futurism, for all its strident bellicosity, could become an...