The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Alternatively, you can try to access the desired document yourself via your local library catalog.
If you have access problems, please contact us.
16 results
Sort by:
In: Cambridge social and cultural histories 20
Cold War controversiesDe Martino between history and ethnology; Women, tarantismo and madness; Conclusion; 4 Asylums; The fence; Poverty, class and negation; Dogs, pigs and humans; Inside/outside; Women and madness; Limits of vision; Documentaries; Transcribed voices; Deinstitutionalization and the enduring problem of psychiatric prisons; Conclusion; 5 Nomad camps; Old and new margins; Nomads, migrants or citizens?; Media, vigilantes and politicians; Conclusion; Conclusion: understanding margins; Bibliography; Index.
This article considers why the idea of an ideal or planned political future for Italy went into decline in the last quarter of the twentieth century, after having dominated the country's political thinking for much of the modern era. What form did imagined futures take in the traditions of both left and right? Why did this way of thinking virtually disappear after the mid 1970s? What are the signs that future-oriented thinking may be starting to reappear in the twenty-first century?
BASE
In: Interventions: international journal of postcolonial studies, Volume 9, Issue 3, p. 350-364
ISSN: 1469-929X
In: Polis: ricerche e studi su società e politica in Italia, Volume 14, Issue 2, p. 213-234
ISSN: 1120-9488
In: Culture and Conflict in Postwar Italy, p. 97-114
In: The Oxford literary review: OLR ; critical analyses of literary, philosophical political and psychoanalytic theory, Volume 2, Issue 2, p. 37-39
ISSN: 1757-1634
The 1930s to the 1950s in Italy witnessed large increases in film-going, radio-listening, and the sale of music and weekly magazines. The industries that made and sold commercial, cultural products were transformed by the new technologies of reproduction and new approaches to marketing and distribution.Yet historians tend to place the "real" genesis of mass culture in the 1960s, or to generalize about the harnessing of mass culture to the Fascist political project, without considering what kind of mass cu