The Living and the Dead

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Distributed by University of Chicago Press
Subjects:
Photography, Italy, Naples
Trim:
9.5 x 8
Page count:
88 pages
Illustration count and type:
88 pages
Publication date:
December
2009
The Neapolitan Cult of the Skull
by Margaret A. Stratton
Synopsis
Snaking beneath the streets and crumbling churches of Naples is a
vast system of ancient catacombs and aqueducts, many lined with skulls
in seemingly endless rows stretching far back into the depths of the
caverns. In The Living and the Dead, Margaret Stratton
provides an unusual photographic record that documents these spaces in
which Neapolitans of early Christian history sought to preserve
emotional connections to the afterlife through rituals in which the
tangible skull represents the ephemeral soul.
Among the remarkable underground cemeteries of Naples that Stratton captures in The Living and the Dead
are the Catacombs of San Gennaro, the Catacomb San Gaudioso, and il
Cimitero delle Fontanelle. Unlike typical early Christian catacombs, the
catacombs of Naples were constructed more like underground cathedrals,
with passageways so vast they could accommodate horse-drawn chariots,
ox-carts, and large biers carrying many corpses. Strikingly, Stratton’s
photographs show that, unlike the rigid class system that governed
medieval Naples, the catacombs offer a virtually classless society,
where noblemen and peasants were laid to rest side by side, their
remains indistinguishable from one another.
The beautiful and solemn images of The Living and the Dead
document the delicate reciprocity between death and the afterlife,
between the living and the dead, and between the early history of
Catholicism and pagan ritual.
Author Biography
Margaret Stratton is head of the Department of Photography in the School of Art and Art History at the University of Iowa. She has received regional and national awards in photography, video, and installation from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Jerome Foundation. Her work has been shown at the Smithsonian Institution, Lincoln Center, the Berlin Film Festival, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, and the Harvard Film Archive.











