Reception of Mesopotamia on Film. Maria de Fatima Rosa

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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_b53598f9-16fb-52aa-906f-c7485a3dfa14">76 Said 1978, p. 2.

      77 77 Idem, p. 3.

      78 78 Kennedy 2017 p. 4.

      79 79 Esposito 2011, p. 2.

      80 80 Bohrer 2003, p. 3.

      81 81 About the poem, vide Gilmour 2019, The Prophet’s Burden.

      82 82 Collins 2020, p. x.

      83 83 Regarding this subject, vide Michelakis and Wyke 2013b, pp. 5–6.

      84 84 Vide above, note 57.

Part I The Pre-Cinematographic Image: A Complex Plot

      1.1 The Genesis of Confusion

      1.1.1 From Babylon to Babel

      The bohemian spirit of the Euphrates capital contributed to this derogatory view, a theme addressed both in the Old Testament and in the classical authors. The unruly behavior of ancient Babylon was the cause of its moral degradation, of its greed and corruption, as well as of its abnormal sexual appetites. The “great prostitute,” epithet through which the writer of the Apocalypse humanizes Babylon, soon became an iconic image that would resound throughout the centuries. Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (1927) is one of the examples of films that uses it, in the specific case to announce an upheaval in the dystopian city. In sum, in biblical Babylon, wealth, luxury, promiscuity, and violence went hand in hand, diluting all the moral limits that supported socio-religious dynamics.

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