Skip to main content
Home

User menu logged out

  • Subscribe
  • Sign in

History Today October 2024

Subscription
Offers

Give a Gift

Main menu

  • Home
  • The Magazine
  • Subscribe
  • Institutions
  • Buy the Current Issue
  • Reviews
  • Sign in
Home

Mini header menu

  • Search
  • Magazine
  • Latest
  • Subscribe

Subscribe

Feature

That Terrible Thing Called Jealousy

Love and possession during the Italian economic miracle.

Niamh Cullen | Published in History Today Volume 70 Issue 2 February 2020

Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg in La Dolce Vita, 1960. Still from La Dolce Vita (Pathé, 1960). Directed by Federico Fellini. Produced by Giuseppe Amato and Angelo Rizzoli. Cinematography by Otello Martelli. Photo © John Kobal Foundation/Getty.

To continue reading this article you need to purchase a subscription, available from only £5.

Start my trial subscription now

If you have already purchased access, or are a print & archive subscriber, please ensure you are logged in.

Please email digital@historytoday.com if you have any problems.

ItalyCultural

Related Articles

Film In Context: La Dolce Vita
Coming to Terms with Fascism in Italy

Popular articles

A watercolour of uniforms worn by sepoys of the Madras army of the British East India Company, c. 1825.
On the Spot: William Dalrymple
Louis XIV, illustration, French, c.1869. New York Public Library. Public Domain.
The Roman Catholic War on Wigs

Recently published

A watercolour of uniforms worn by sepoys of the Madras army of the British East India Company, c. 1825.
On the Spot: William Dalrymple
‘Peace in the Crimea, April, 1856‘, showing British, Russian, French and Sardinian soldiers, by Orlando Norie. Prints, Drawings and Watercolors from the Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection. Brown Digital Repository. Brown University Library. Public Domain.
‘Crimean Quagmire’ by Gregory Carleton review
A poster in Russian and Uzbek celebrating the tenth anniversary of the Red Army, published in Tashkent, 1928. SCMCHR. Public Domain.
Muslim Modernisers on the Silk Road

Most read

  1. On the Spot: William Dalrymple
  2. The Roman Catholic War on Wigs
  3. ‘Crimean Quagmire’ by Gregory Carleton review
  4. ‘After the Flying Saucers Came’, ‘Think to New Worlds’ and ‘How to Think Impossibly’ review
  5. Herzl’s Troubled Dream: The Origins of Zionism
X
Get Miscellanies, our free weekly long read, in your inbox every week

Footer menu

  • About
  • Masthead
  • Contact
  • Jobs
  • Advertising
  • RSS feeds
  • Submit an Article
  • Back Issues
  • Binders
  • Cookie policy
  • Awards
  • Students
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Twitter
  • Instagram

© Copyright 2024 History Today Ltd. Company no. 1556332.