by JohnPemble (Author), JohnPemble (Author), John Pemble (Author)
How does a city become an icon? During the 200 years since its political extinction, the shabby relic of a despised tyranny has been transformed into a great modern cultural symbol by the work of such eminent Venetophiles as Ruskin, Proust, Mann, and Henry James. John Pemble shows how American and European outsiders developed an obsession with the idea of a dying city which must be preserved at all costs; how they reconstructed the imagery as well as the architecture of Venice, and how the Victorian need to restore was supplanted by a wish to conserve without altering the remains of this fragile inheritance. This engaging and novel interpretation links the transfiguration of Venice to social and intellectual changes in Europe and North America. Analysing the appeal of the city to novelists, historians, and apostles of `culture', the author demonstrates how changing perceptions of the city reveal much about the development of modern Western sensibility. This book is intended for readers of modern cultural history, historiography, visitors to Venice, and general readers with an interest in Italy.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 231
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 16 Feb 1995
ISBN 10: 9780198205
ISBN 13: 9780198205012
A historian's fresh, fascinating account of the potent symbolic resurrection of Venice in the European imagination after its political death in 1815. --The New York Times Book Review (And Bear in Mind)
As Pemble's absorbing and beautifully written book suggests, Venice will bury us all. --Gilbert Adair, Sunday Times
John Pemple's thought-provoking Venice Rediscovered gives a fascinating account of how Venice acquired her present mythical status as the city of our dreams and the epitome of romance. This is a complex book, full of interesting ideas and one that will intrigue the lovers of Venice. --Country Life
A carefully reconstructed survey of how...foreigners viewed the city and its role in history and the arts. --Library Journal