Venice: Fragile City, 1797-1997

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Yale University Press, 1 янв. 2002 г. - Всего страниц: 550
To the delight of visitors - and sometimes the dismay of residents - Venice is a city that appears to have resisted modernization. Its canals, gondolas, and picturesque buildings seem little changed since the Renaissance. This engrossing and strikingly illustrated book presents a wide-ranging cultural history of the city from 1797 until 1997, and shows how it has in fact changed and adapted and how perceptions of it have shaped its reality. The book charts Venice’s architectural and urban changes, the conservation efforts to protect the city and lagoon against the sea, and the social restructuring of the city, from Napoleon’s conquest through the upheavals of the World Wars to the battles against depopulation and the threats posed by the sea, industrial pollution, and mass tourism. Above all, it explores the myths that surround the city - created by writers, artists, architects, musicians, and filmmakers who have come to visit, and by the Venetians themselves - alongside the realities of living and working in a fragile city.
 

Содержание

The Lion of Venice will lift his paws from the earth
9
The Foreign View
21
The Municipality
29
The End of the Municipality
35
Austrian and French Rule 17981814
43
Darus History of the Republic
87
The Bravo at Large
95
Ruskins Stones
131
Love Art and Death in FindeSiècle Venice
195
19141940
271
The Impossible Rebuilding
311
Responses to the Flood
355
The City That Would Be Modern
389
Redevelopment
430
The Critique of the Tourist
437
Foreign Perceptions
443

The Revolution of 18481849
138
The Austrians Return
145
Passsive Resistance
152
After 1866
159
From the Present
451
After Two Hundred Years
457
Photograph Credits
532
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Об авторе (2002)

Margaret Plant is professor emeritus of history of art, Monash University, Melbourne.

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