Migrant Memories provides an innovative perspective on the power of cultural memory and the influence of cinema on the Italian diaspora in Britain. Based on extensive interviews with Southern Italian migrants and their children, this study offers a fresh understanding of the migrants' journey from Italy to Britain since the early 1950s. The volume examines how the experience of contemporary Italian identity has been mediated through film, photography and popular culture through the generations. Beginning with an analysis of the films of Frank Capra and Anthony Minghella, the book goes on to address the popular melodramas of Raffaello Matarazzo and ultimately argues that cinema, and the memory of it, had a significant influence on the identity formation of first-generation Italians in Britain. Coupled with this analysis of cinema's relationship to migration, the cultural memory of the Italian diaspora is explored through traditions of education, religion, marriage and cuisine. Thevolume highlights the complexities of cultural history and migration at a time when debates about immigration in Britain have become politically and culturally urgent.
«Standing out from previous similar literature, one of the greatest strengths of 'Migrant Memories' is the meticulous use of a variety of artifacts and objects of memory as parts of the narration [...]. In this creative remembrance of personal memories and practices of home making, the author brilliantly opens up new and promising trajectories that throw an unexpected light on [... the] Italian Diaspora [...]. Academics, theorists, students, migrants, those who lived or are living the diasporic experience, those who can remember their grandparents' memories, will certainly benefit from this wonderful reading; it is a warm and sincere picture of our past and our present that will have a siginificant impact on the way we debate issues of migration and the problematic of integration between cultures.» (Sara Marino, Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture 5.2-3, 2014)