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
Explores the nexus between gender and violence by comparing male violence against females and female violence against males and their ever-increasing representation in popular culture.
Elisa Giomi is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts at Roma Tre University, Italy. Her work has been published in Television Antiheroines (2017) and the International Review of Sociology. Sveva Magaraggia is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Social Sciences at the University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy. Her publications include Feminist Perspectives on Teaching Masculinities: Learning Beyond Stereotypes (2019) and "The Men’s Issue. Male Violence against Women in Media Representations" in AIS-Journal of Sociology.
Male and Female Violence in Popular Media is a clear, multilayered
and disarmingly accessible look at the complex relationship between
gender and violence, gendering as an act of violence, and violence
as always already gendered.
*Diego Semerene, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands*
The theoretical framework and analytical approach to gender
violence, the breath of the sources consulted and the range of
media discussed, make this comparative study of media
representations of violent men and women an original and valuable
contribution to scholarship in gender studies and sociology of
communication.
*Flavia Laviosa, Wellesley College, USA*
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