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Male and Female Violence in Popular Media brings into focus the
apparently symmetrical phenomena of men's violence against women
and women's violence against men, explaining the profound
differences in their actual features as well as in their
representations, which over the last few years have been
proliferating in a vast array of global media contents. Elisa Giomi
and Sveva Magaraggia consider popular media including crime TV
series such as The Killing (Denmark, 2007- 2012), The Fall (UK,
2013-2016) and True Detective (USA, 2015), factual entertainment
such as Who the (bleep) Did I Marry? (Investigation Discovery,
2010-2015), and Italian pop music in order to examine popular
culture's depictions of men and women in their opposite, yet
complementary, roles of perpetrators and victims. They reveal how
TV shows, pop-songs, news and commercials that populate global
audiences' daily life fuel false beliefs about love and sexuality
that either legitimate or stigmatise violence depending on the
perpetrators and victims' gender.
Current trends of globalization have influenced the social,
economic, and political framework of national media worldwide. In
recent years, the field of media studies has focused on
globalization as a phenomenon that has greatly impacted the
production and reception of media formats. By reshaping local
economies, diversifying societies, and introducing digital
technologies, the globalization of media has enacted a process of
re-definition of national and local broadcasting. Beyond Monopoly:
Globalization and Contemporary Italian Media examines the impact of
globalization on contemporary Italian media. By engaging both the
production and reception levels of different media, this volume
assesses the extent to which Italian media have been part of
current trends of media flows and have responded to the centrifugal
and centripetal forces of globalization. The contributors to this
edited volume touch upon a wide diversity of issues, such as
foreign ownership on Satellite TV, the effects of digital
technology on media policy making, and the framing of "Otherness"
in the news. Beyond Monopoly provides a unique case study of the
complexity of national media in the era of globalization that will
appeal to students as well as scholars of global and national media
systems.
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