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Illegality and the Making of Italy

Crime Italian Style

Stephanie Malia Hom editor Dana Renga editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Liverpool University Press

Publishing:28th Mar '26

£130.00

This title is due to be published on 28th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Illegality and the Making of Italy cover

Italy has long been thought of as a terra di mezzo, a land in between, a crossroads where life “above” exists together with life “below.” Italy’s underworld is taken as a given fact, and enjoys a global, if not romanticized, reputation. This volume is a first-of-its-kind study that explores how crime and illegality have served to make modern Italy and Italians. Its chapters set into relief “crime Italian style”: a distinct formation comprised of the porousness between licit and illicit and the malleability of illegality that has distinguished Italy as a nation-state since Unification. From courtrooms to television screens, and mafia dons to political activists, this volume delves into Italy’s criminal patrimony as well as the entanglements between Italian politics and organized crime, how ideas about crime and criminality cross borders and become attached to people, and how the representational force of the media continues to transform who or what is marked as criminal. This volume reconnects Italy to its heritage of crime and punishment to offer a new take on modern Italian identity that recognizes its relationship to illegality as a central, rather than peripheral, attribute.

'This book provides a stimulating and original addition to our knowledge of contemporary Italy and its representation in different media. Crime in relation to Italy's history is an association which resonates amongst readers, but which is also in need for a proper contextualisation beyond cliches and prejudices. This book does so and, as a collection of fourteen separate essays, allows the term to be interpreted and studied in a range of different cases.’ Guido Bonsaver, University of Oxford

ISBN: 9781805966395

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

320 pages