Lexington Books
Pages: 300
Trim: 6½ x 9¾
978-0-7391-2851-0 • Hardback • December 2009 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7391-4267-7 • eBook • December 2009 • $135.50 • (£105.00)
Michela Ardizzoni is assistant professor in the department of French and Italian and the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Colorado at Boulder. She is author of North/South, East/West: Mapping Italianness on Television.
Chiara Ferrari is assistant professor of mass communication in the department of communication design at California State University, Chico.
Part 1 Foreword
Part 2 Introduction: Italian Media between the Local and the Global
Part 3 Part I: Globalization, Policy, and Technology
Chapter 4 Chapter 1: Shaping Tomorrow's Television: Policies on Digital Television in Italy, 1996-2006
Chapter 5 Chapter 2:"Il Caso Canadese" and the Question of Global Media
Chapter 6 Chapter 3: Digital Terrestrial Television and its Promises: Framing the Debate on the Transition to Digital Television in Italy
Part 7 Part II: Television Flows and Formats
Chapter 8 Chapter 4: Struggling for Identity: The Television Production Sector in Italy and the Challenges of Globalization
Chapter 9 Chapter 5:Public and Private, Global and Local in Italian Crime Drama: The Case of La Piovra
Chapter 10 Chapter 6: Dubbing The Simpsons: Or How Groundskeeper Willie Lost His Kilt in Sardinia
Chapter 11 Chapter 7: A Peninsula in the Sea of TV Formats: Exploring Italian Adaptations of Survivor
Part 12 Part III:New and Alternative Media
Chapter 13 Chapter 8:E-democracy and Italian Public Administration: New Media at the Service of Citizens
Chapter 14 Chapter 9: Neighborhood Television Channels in Italy: The Case of Telestreet
Chapter 15 Chapter 10: Web-Based Technologies in Media and Cultural Production: Emerging Evidence from Italian Web-Tvs and Web-Radios
Part 16 Part IV:Immigration and Diversity
Chapter 17 Chapter 11:Missed Opportunities: The Debate on Immigrants' Voting Rights in Italian Newspapers and Television
Chapter 18 Chapter 12: Globalization vs. Localization: Anti-immigrant and Hate Discourses in Italy
Chapter 19 Chapter 13:Multiculturalism in New Italian Cinema: The Impact of Migration, Diaspora, and the Post-Colonial on Italy's Self-Representation
This smart and accessible volume guides the reader across the diverse and fascinating terrain of Italian media, showing why the common fixation on the media empire of Silvio Berlusconi obscures the complicated cultural reality of Italy today. Michela Ardizzoni and Chiara Ferrari have selected an impressive collection of critical essays on topics ranging from local guerrilla television to digital media to transnational satellite TV. Taken together these studies profoundly expand and enrich our understanding of such important concerns as globalization, corporatization, and transculturation.
— Michael Curtin, Mellichamp Professor, University of California, Santa Barbara; author of Playing to the World's Biggest Audience
The essays in this innovative and timely book offer a fascinating insight into lesser-known aspects of the Italian media system in the era of Berlusconi. Beyond Monopoly will be of great value to anyone interested in understanding the way the Italian media have changed in the last twenty years. While Berlusconi looms large in the volume, the focus falls on unconventional and alternative media as well as the opportunities furnished through technological change, globalization, and national and local media markets.
— Stephen Gundle, Warwick University