European University Institute Library

Popular High Culture in Italian Media, 1950-1970, Mona Lisa Covergirl, by Emma Barron

Label
Popular High Culture in Italian Media, 1950-1970, Mona Lisa Covergirl, by Emma Barron
Language
eng
resource.imageBitDepth
0
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Popular High Culture in Italian Media, 1950-1970
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1049171817
Responsibility statement
by Emma Barron
Series statement
Springer eBooks.Italian and Italian American Studies
Sub title
Mona Lisa Covergirl
Summary
When Mona Lisa smiled enigmatically from the cover of the Italian magazine Epoca in 1957, she gazed out at more than three million readers. As Emma Barron argues, her appearance on the cover is emblematic of the distinctive ways that high culture was integrated into Italy's mass culture boom in the 1950s and 1960s, a period when popular appropriations of literature, fine art and music became a part of the rapidly changing modern Italian identity. Popular magazines ran weekly illustrated adaptations of literary classics. Television brought opera from the opera house into the homes of millions. Readers wrote to intellectuals and artists such as Alberto Moravia, Thomas Mann and Salvatore Quasimodo by the thousands with questions about literature and self-education. Drawing upon new archival material on the demographics of television audiences and magazine readers, this book is an engaging account of how the Italian people took possession of high culture and transformed the modern Italian identity.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
1. Introduction: The Mona Lisa Covergirl -- 2. Italia domanda: A question of culture -- 3. Dear Intellectual: The cultural advice columns -- 4. Lascia o raddoppia?: Contestants and the classics -- 5. Lip-syncing Rossini: The highs and lows of Italian television opera -- 6. Puccini, Botticelli and celebrity endorsements: The art of magazine advertising -- 7. Reciting Shakespeare for Amaretto di Saronno: The art of Carosello -- 8. The classics and the everyday: From I Promessi Sposi to I Promessi Paperi -- 9. Patrolling the border: I Promessi Sposi on RAI television -- 10. Conclusion: The smile of Bergman, the body of Rita and the face of Mona Lisa
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