This article investigates the trajectories of appropriation and reinterpretation of Italian (post)colonial soundscapes across a wide range of film products. Songs, melodies, and sonic tropes originally tied to the colonial experience re-emerged in different contexts, where they could evoke nostalgia, naturalise stereotypes, or serve as critical counterpoints. Adopting a transmedial perspective, the analysis traces how these auditory residues mediated shifting perceptions of empire, from the exoticising soundscapes of postwar documentaries to the critical re-significations evident in more recent films such as La via dei Babbuini(1974) and Asmarina. In so doing, I intend to highlight how colonial echoes persisted in the aural discourse as dynamic sites of nostalgia, memory, contestation, and reflection within Italian culture.
Gianmarco Mancosu (Tue,) studied this question.
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