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Male and female violence in popular media forms / Elisa Giomi and Sveva Magaraggia.

By: Giomi, Elisa [author.]Contributor(s): Magaraggia, Sveva [author.]Series: Library of gender and popular culture: Publisher: London : Bloomsbury Academic, 2022Description: 256 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 22 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volume001: BDZ0048914958ISBN: 9781350168756 (hbk.) :; 9781625311580 (pbk.) :Subject(s): Violence in mass media | Violence in men | Violence in women | Violence in popular culture | Politics and Government | Sociology & anthropology | Television | Popular culture | Media studies | Violence in society | Gender studies, gender groupsDDC classification: 303.6 LOC classification: P96.V5 | G56 2022
Contents:
Series Editors' Introduction -- Introduction -- Part I: Theoretical Frames -- 1. Men's Violence Against Women: Data, Explanatory Models and Debates -- 2. Women's Violence Against Men: Data, Explanatory Models and Debates -- 3. Men's Violence Against Women and Women's Violence Against Men on the Media: Aesthetics, Rhetorics and Politics of Representation -- Part II: Empirical Research -- 4. "You have to beg me not to kill you": Male Violence in Contemporary Italian Pop Music -- 5. Ladies' Violence is a Game, Gentlemen's Violence is Deadly: The (Ab)uses of Gendered Violence in -- Advertising -- 6. Tormented Men vs Manipulative Women: Male and Female Intimate Partner Violence in Factual Entertainment -- 7. "Man of any size lays hands on me, he's gonna bleed out in under a minute": The New Politics of Representation of Gendered Violence in International Crime TV Series -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary: 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.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 303.6 GIO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Checked out 06/03/2024 114662

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

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.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Series Editors' Introduction -- Introduction -- Part I: Theoretical Frames -- 1. Men's Violence Against Women: Data, Explanatory Models and Debates -- 2. Women's Violence Against Men: Data, Explanatory Models and Debates -- 3. Men's Violence Against Women and Women's Violence Against Men on the Media: Aesthetics, Rhetorics and Politics of Representation -- Part II: Empirical Research -- 4. "You have to beg me not to kill you": Male Violence in Contemporary Italian Pop Music -- 5. Ladies' Violence is a Game, Gentlemen's Violence is Deadly: The (Ab)uses of Gendered Violence in -- Advertising -- 6. Tormented Men vs Manipulative Women: Male and Female Intimate Partner Violence in Factual Entertainment -- 7. "Man of any size lays hands on me, he's gonna bleed out in under a minute": The New Politics of Representation of Gendered Violence in International Crime TV Series -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index

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.

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