Vie Nuove Explained
Category: | Political magazine |
Frequency: | Weekly |
Founder: | Luigi Longo |
Founded: | 1946 |
Finaldate: | 1978 |
Country: | Italy |
Based: | Rome |
Language: | Italian |
Vie Nuove (Italian: New Ways) was a weekly popular magazine published in Rome, Italy, between 1946 and 1978. The magazine was one of the post-war publications of the Italian Communist Party which used it to attract larger sections of the population.[1] [2]
History and profile
Vie Nuove was launched by the Communist Party in 1946 with the goal of informing the party members about recent developments. Another function of the magazine was to develop and disseminate a positive image of the Soviet Union focusing on its technical superiority over the Western capitalist countries.[3]
The first issue of Vie Nuove appeared on 22 September 1946.[4] Its founder was Luigi Longo[5] [6] who also edited the magazine.[7] It was headquartered in Rome.[8] The last issue with the original title was published on 21 April 1971, and it appeared with the title Giorni – Vie nuove until 1978.[4]
Editors-in-chief
The editors-in-chief of Vie Nuove included Luigi Longo (from September 1946 to November 1956), Maria Antonietta Macciocchi (from November 1956 to November 1961), Giorgio Cingoli (from November 1961 to January 1963), Paolo Bracaglia Morante (from January 1963 to September 1967), Mario Melloni (from October 1967 to May 1969) and Davide Lajolo (from June 1969 to 1978).[4]
Contributors and content
Historian Paolo Spriano was one of the contributors.[9] Another contributor was Maria Musu.[10] Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini published his writings in a column in the magazine in which he also replied the questions of readers concerning literature, religion, Marxist theory, among others.[11] The column was titled Dialoghi con Passolini (Italian: Passolini in Dialogue) and lasted from 28 May 1960 to 30 September 1965 with one year interruption between 1963 and September 1964.[11] [12]
Vie Nuovo sponsored beauty contests like its sister publications L'Unità and Pattuglia .[13] The magazine valued the female movie stars of the 1950s, including Gina Lollobrigida, Silvana Mangano and Sophia Loren and frequently covered articles about them.[14] However, it was against photoromances arguing that these were the tools for bourgeois and capitalist propaganda which mortified women due to the fact they were sexually objectified in their photographs.[10]
Circulation
In 1952 Vie Nuovo reached the highest circulation selling 350,000 copies.[11] Next year its circulation was 200,000 copies.[8] The magazine sold 125-130,000 copies in 1963.[15] Its circulation was between 114,000 and 120,000 copies in late 1966.[15]
Notes and References
- Juan José Gómez Gutiérrez. Italian Communist Party cultural policies during the post-war period 1944-1951. The Open University. 2002. PhD. 10.21954/ou.ro.0000e7f7.
- Jessica L. Harris. "Noi Donne" and "Famiglia Cristiana": Communists, Catholics, and American Female Culture in Cold War Italy. Carte Italiane. 2017. 10.5070/C9211030384. 2. 11. free.
- Rosario Forlenza. The Soviet Myth and the Making of Communist Lives in Italy, 1943–56. 2021. 57. 3. 249751724. 647. 10.1177/00220094211068339. Journal of Contemporary History.
- Web site: Vie Nuove. it. archivipci.it. 20 September 2023.
- Web site: The PCI Foundation in Cover. gettyimages. 2 May 2021.
- Guglielmo Perfetti. 46. PhD. Absolute beginners of the "Belpaese." Italian youth culture and the Communist Party in the years of the economic boom. 2018. University of Glasgow.
- Book: The Great Pretense. 1956. 587. Washington, DC. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- Mitchell V. Charnley. The Rise of the Weekly Magazine in Italy. 30. 4. 10.1177/107769905303000405. 1953. Journalism Quarterly. 477. 191530801.
- Book: Laura Ciglioni. Italian Mass Media and the Atom in the 1960s: The Memory of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the Peaceful Atom (1963–1967). Elisabetta Bini. Igor Londero. Nuclear Italy: An International History of Italian Nuclear Policies during the Cold War. Trieste. Edizione Universita di Trieste. 978-88-8303-812-9. 2017. 165–179. http://hdl.handle.net/10077/15336. 10077/15336.
- Paola Bonifazio. Political Photoromances: The Italian Communist Party, Famiglia Cristiana, and the Struggle for Women's Hearts. Italian Studies. 2017. 72. 4. 393–413. 10.1080/00751634.2017.1370790. 158612028.
- Book: Robert Samuel Clive Gordon. Pasolini: Forms of Subjectivity. 1996. Clarendon Press. 978-0-19-815905-6. 47–48. Oxford.
- Alessandro Valenzisi. What Makes an Ideo-comic Fable?. 1. 1. International Journal of Comparative Literature and Arts. January–June 2014.
- Catherine O'Rawe . Stardom and Performance in Postwar Italian Cinema 1945–54, University of Turin, 17–18 May 2018. Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies. 2019. 7. 1. 132. 10.1386/jicms.7.1.131_7. 192737373 .
- Book: 94. Stephen Gundle. Gilbert M. Joseph. Emily S. Rosenberg. Between Hollywood and Moscow. The Italian Communists and the Challenge of Mass Culture, 1943–1991. Duke University Press. What’s Good for Fiat is Good for Italy. 2020. https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780822380344/html. 241844151. 10.1515/9780822380344. 9780822380344. Durham, NC; London.
- Laura Ciglioni. Italian Public Opinion in the Atomic Age: Mass market Magazines Facing Nuclear Issues (1963–1967). Cold War History. 2017. 207. 17. 3. 10.1080/14682745.2017.1291633. 157614168.