Offering a thorough, well-documented examination of the nexus between Italian politics and public television over the past 60 years, Padovani concludes that government involvement in the television system may have in some ways improved the public service role of state-owned television broadcasting. She explains how a political quota system served to stabilize the system in an ironic sort of way. Detailed and current (the author includes many mentions of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, his party, and his private media holdings), the book is undoubtedly the most thorough examination of the topic available in English. Highly recommended.
CHOICE
A fantastic book. Essential reading for anyone interested in politics, communication, or Italy.
- David Cox, Broadcasting Policy Group, London,
A Fatal Attraction is what really happens to the reader of Padovani's book after a few pages: you cannot stop reading it. It is not only a skillfully and professionally crafted analysis of the fascinating relationship between, and history of, politics and media journalism in Italy. It is also a passionate journey through the troubled waters of the relationships between truth and power, in search of the meaning of the former in media and of the boundaries of the latter in democracy. I would recommend the book to anyone who is concerned with the future of democracy in our societies.
- Sergio Finardi, journalist and U.S. correspondent for il manifesto (Rome),
A Fatal Attraction proves to be a useful and resourceful book for scholars of Italian politics and media culture, but also for readers interested in studying examples of public media that challenge and deviate from the dominant Anglo-Saxon model of political independence.
- Michela Ardizzoni, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA, Journal Of International Communication
The book is very rich and extremely very well documented....Padovani’s book is a very good starting point for a discussion on pluralism on the media and the different ways to practice it and to enrich it making a better democratic life possible giving all the different parts of the society the same rights of expression.
- Paolo Mancini, Political Communication
The history of Italian television is . . . relevant not only for comprehending the history of the country but also, in particular, for understanding the present phase of its politics. This book is a valuable resource for anyone wishing to develop such an understanding.
- Giuseppe Richeri, University of Italian Switzerland, from the Foreword,
This series covers a broad range of critical research and theory about media in the modern world. It includes work about the changing structures of the media, focusing particularly on work about the political and economic forces and social relations which shape and are shaped by media institutions, structural changes in policy formation and enforcement, technological transformations in the means of communication, and the relationships of all of these to public and private cultures worldwide. Historical research about the media and intellectual histories pertaining to media research and theory are particularly welcomed. Emphasizing the role of social and political theory for informing and shaping research about communications media, Critical Media Studies addresses the politics of media institutions at national, subnational, and transnational levels. The series will also include short, synthetic texts on key thinkers and concepts in critical media studies. ADVISORY BOARD: Patricia Aufderheide, American University; Jean-Claude Burgelman, Institute for Prospective Technological Studies; Simone Chambers, University of Toronto; Nicholas Garnham, University of Westminster; Hanno Hardt, University of Iowa; Gay Hawkins, The University of New South Wales; Maria Heller, EÜtvÜs Lorçnd University; Robert Horwitz, University of California at San Diego; Douglas Kellner, University of California at Los Angeles; Gary Marx, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Toby Miller, University of California at Riverside; Vincent Mosco, Queen's University; Janice Peck, University of Colorado; Manjunath Pendakur, Southern Illinois University; Arvind Rajagopal, New York University; Giuseppe Richeri, Universitê Svizzera Italiana; Kevin Robins, Goldsmiths College; Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago; Dan Schiller, University of Illinois; Colin Sparks, University of Westminster; Slavko Splichal, University of Ljubljana; Thomas Streeter, University of Vermont; Liesbet van Zoonen, University of Amsterdam; Janet Wasko, University of Oregon.
Series Editor: Andrew Calabrese, University of Colorado