Rocco Schiavone
Main character: Vice Questore Rocco Schiavone
Country of origin: Italy
Main location: Aosta, Rome
Creator: Antonio Manzini
Born in: Rome, Italy
Born on: August 7, 1964
Nationality: Italian
Literary series started in: 2013, Pista nera (Eng. transl.: Black Run)
Original language: Italian
Publisher: Sellerio (Palermo, Italy)
Number of books (original editions): 11
Latest title published in: 2020, Ah l’amore, l’amore (Eng. transl.: Ah! The Love, the Love)
Translations: French, English, Spanish, German
Television series title: Rocco Schiavone
Television series started in: 2016
Producer: RAI, Italy
Number of seasons: 3
Latest season broadcast: 2019
Transnational distribution: Yes
Case study rationale:
Rocco Schiavone is a surly and unfriendly Police Deputy Commissioner who for disciplinary reasons has been moved from Rome, his hometown, to the cold and mountainous Aosta. His distrust of others is expressed clearly by his habit of comparing people to animals through some similarity they share in the aspect or behavior. Despite the transfer, Rocco continues to act – starting from his clothing, which he refuses to adapt to Aosta’s harsh climate – like he were still in Rome, thus stressing the difference between certain ways of living (and investigating) typical of the Capital and those characteristic of the small, peripheral town. The incapacity to let the past go becomes quite evident in his relationship with Marina, his wife. Indeed, although she has been deceased for several years, Rocco continues to imagine her alive and to engage in real conversations with her. Started as the protagonist of a successful series of books written by Antonio Manzini, Rocco Schiavone has significantly grown in popularity after its adaptation for television. The TV series exploits the cold, bluish light of Aosta, along with its beautiful landscapes, to set an engaging noir where episodic investigations bumps into Rocco’s demons of the past.
Online research resources
Watch
Rocco Schiavone, Season 2, episode 2 (“Tutta la verità”). In the last part of the clip, Rocco uses his peculiar investigative method, which consists in comparing a human being (in this case a witness) to an animal with similar behaviour [in Italian]:
Antonio Manzini talks about Rocco Schiavone at Wired Next Fest 2018. Manzini talks about the characterization of Rocco Schiavone as an italian antihero and the peculiarities of the contemporary italian crime fiction as a combination of the classic Giallo and the hardboiled tradition [in Italian]:
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Read
- Favaro, Manuel. “La lingua del giallo all’italiana contemporaneo tra romanzo e serie televisiva : il caso di Rocco Schiavone”. Linguistica e letteratura, XLIII, 1/2, (2018): 245-273.
- Marotti, Agostino. “Rocco Schiavone: un mancato rough hero italiano”. E/C, 15 November 2017. Web.
- Velázquez García, Sara. “El “giallo” se prepara para la era post-Montalbano el auge de Rocco Schiavone”. Clásicos y contemporáneos en el género negro. Ed. Alex Martín Escribà, Javier Sánchez Zapatero. Santiago de Compostela: Andavira, 2018. 333-342.
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