Shadow Plays: Virtual Realities in an Analog World

Chapter 3, Note 56

For example, the “athlete of sex” played by Donald Sutherland in Federico Fellini’s 1977 phantasmagoric adaptation of Casanova’s life, Fellini's Casanova; or the wigged and powdered, gouty, and somewhat ghostly character played by Marcello Mastroianni in Ettore Scola’s 1982 film Il Mondo Nuovo/La Nuit de Varennes; or the protagonist of such acclaimed works of fiction as Arthur Schnitzler, Casanova’s Return to Venice, trans. Ilsa Barea (1918; repr., New York: Penguin/Random House, 2013), Sandor Marai, Casanova in Bolzano, trans. George Szirtes (1940; repr., New York: Penguin/Random House, 2005); or, finally, the author featured in countless critical appraisals, from Stephan Zweig, Casanova: A Study in Self-Portraiture (Pushkin Press, 2009) to Robert Abirached, Casanova; ou, la dissipation (Paris: Grasset, 1961) and Chantal Thomas, Casanova: un voyage libertin (Paris: Denoël, 2014), to name just a few.

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