Italian American Culture_SP18Main MenuIntroductionIntroduction to the bookJust a Boat Ride Away: A Book of Three Short StoriesBy Ivy Wood, Daniela Anastasi, and Gianna CrivelloEmigrationDominic GialdiniItalian Military Citizenship in the U.S.This is a page about the history of Italians serving in the U.S. military during WWI and WWII. Along with some family ties connected with serving in the military to gain citizenship. (By: Briana Santangelo)The Old Man and the SeaMarlene's textThe Italian American Mafia and FilmRacial diversity among the Mafia by Alison DoyleTaking a look at the benefits of racial diversity in the Mob.The American Dream in Christ in ConcreteItalian Americans and FoodIn this section we will present the importance of of the Italian cuisine in the American culture, how the original recipes arrived to the United States and had to be adapted in order to be accepted by Americans.The Meaning of Italian Food by Karla TorresThe Benefits of Migration & The Costs of Assimilation, By Taylor ParkerBy: Taylor ParkerStruggles of Assimilation For Immigrants. By Alexander LutzComparing how immigrants assimilate into America. By Alexander LutzHomophobiaHomophobia within the Italian-American CommunityVulnerability in Italian American Culture by Keitel Del RosarioBy Keitel Del RosarioItalians in HollywoodClarissa Clòdb886ad53bc7213a988f9e7e4415f782ea7c35a2
12018-04-30T19:58:12-07:00Early Representations4gallery2018-04-30T22:01:11-07:00 During the 1930’s all the way to the 1960’s there were various gangster films that captured the imagination of American audiences. These films like Mervyn Leroy’s Little Caesar (1930) and Howard Hawks’ Scarface (1932) tried to profit from the gangster craze brought on by the media coverage of gang violence. Most of the time all the gangsters would be played by a White, non-Italian, male who took on personas of what they thought a gangster would be like, usually greedy, woman chasing, and violent. These films were brought to screen because the well known gangsters like Al Capone and the violence of the Castellammarese War was still fresh in the minds of many Americans and the movie industry wanted to capitalize on it. The movies were often cheap and shallow, with the main themes being about freedom and fighting against the system. It allowed WASP male audiences to live a fantasy role, much like that of a pirate, or a cowboy, in which they could live in a free world and do what they wanted to. It often portrayed the hyper masculine characters whom were based on real life Italian mobsters, as cultureless opting to only focus on the actions while ignoring any trace of ethnicity attached to the representation except occasionally a bad Brooklyn accent. WASP audiences could enjoy the thrill of the gangster life without ever having to acknowledge any cultural impacts the character would have or any customs they might keep. Basically, keep the Italian parts out of the movie about Italians. This would change with award winning movie series known as the Mario Puzo’s The Godfather (1974).