Synopses & Reviews
“In Naples, there are more singers than there are unemployed people.” These words echo through the neomelodica music scene, a vast undocumented economy animated by wedding singers, pirate TV, and tens of thousands of fans throughout southern Italy and beyond. In a city with chronic unemployment, this setting has attracted hundreds of aspiring singers trying to make a living—or even a fortune. In the process, they brush up against affiliates of the region’s violent organized crime networks, the camorra. In The Art of Making Do in Naples, Jason Pine explores the murky neomelodica music scene and finds himself on uncertain ground.
The “art of making do” refers to the informal and sometimes illicit entrepreneurial tactics of some Neapolitans who are pursuing a better life for themselves and their families. In the neomelodica music scene, the art of making do involves operating do-it-yourself recording studios and performing at the private parties of crime bosses. It can also require associating with crime boss-impresarios who guarantee their success by underwriting it with extortion, drug trafficking, and territorial influence. Pine, likewise “making do,” gradually realized that the completion of his ethnographic work also depended on the aid of forbidding figures.
The Art of Making Do in Naples offers a riveting ethnography of the lives of men who seek personal sovereignty in a shadow economy dominated, in incalculable ways, by the camorra. Pine navigates situations suffused with secrecy, moral ambiguity, and fears of ruin that undermine the anthropologist’s sense of autonomy. Making his way through Naples’s spectacular historic center and outer slums, on the trail of charmingly evasive neomelodici singers and unsettlingly elusive camorristi, Pine himself becomes a music video director and falls into the orbit of a shadowy music promoter who may or may not be a camorra affiliate.
Pine’s trenchant observations and his own improvised attempts at “making do” provide a fascinating look into the lives of people in the gray zones where organized crime blends into ordinary life.
Review
"Exploring musical performance as a pathway to the Neapolitan underworld, Jason Pine shows how the improbable becomes persuasive as he passionately embraces the challenges of uncertainty and vagueness that mark a highly stylized but passionate arena of social interaction. In the intense theatricality of their shape-shifting kaleidoscope of relationships and identities, Pine’s vivid interlocutors challenge the realism of anthropological description through an aesthetic realism of their own, one that dissolves the boundary between art and life." —Michael Herzfeld, author of
Evicted from EternityReview
"Jason Pine finds treasure in one city’s ‘a munezz’, or what some people of Naples call trash—referring to neomelodica music. A great companion to Saviano’s Gomorrah, Pine’s outsider perspective enables us all to safely witness this dangerous art of making do. With the eye of a cunning journalist and the descriptive skills of a fine novelist, Pine illuminates the murky world of the Camorra and Naples’ neomelodica scene. This is writing culture at its best." —Fred Gardaphe, author of
From Wiseguys to Wise Men: The Gangster and Italian American MasculinitiesAbout the Author
Jason Pine is assistant professor of anthropology and media, society and the arts at Purchase College, State University of New York.
Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. The Contact Zone: Where Organized Crime and Everyday Life Comingle
1. Where There’s Money, There’s the Camorra
2. Making Do with Art: Counterfeit Music, Pirated TV, and Crime Clan Weddings
3. The Sceneggiata: Melodramas of Manhood, Allegories of Violence
4. Family Affairs: Coming of Age on Stage
Act One: The Ventriloquist’s Ventriloquist
Act Two: Betraying Secrets
Act Three: The Erotics of Exposure
5. Ethnographic Imbroglios
6. Who Am I and Who Are You? The Promise and Threat of Contact with the Camorra
Act One: Lying Together
Act Two: Seduction and Colonization
Act Three: Eye of the Storm
Conclusion: Making Do with Indeterminacy
Notes
Bibliography
Index