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Ruins Past: Modernity in Italy, 1744-1836 PDF

271 Pages·2015·32.178 MB·English
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RUINS PAST MODERNITY IN fTALY, 1744-1836 OXFORD UNIVERSITY STUDIES IN THE ENLIGHTENMENT - formerly Stwlies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century (SVEC), is dedicated to eighteenth-century research. General editor Jonathan Mallinson, Trinity College, University of Oxford Editorial board Wilda Anderson, Johns Hopkins University Matthew Bell, King's College London Marc André Bernier, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières Nicholas Cronk, Voltaire Foundation, University of Oxford Dan Edelstein, Stanford University Rebecca Haidt, Ohio State University Colin Jones, Queen Mary, University of London Mark Ledbury, University of Sydney Francesca Savoia, University of Pittsburgh J. B. Shank, University of Minnesota Céline Spector, Université Bordeaux 3 Joanna Stalnaker, Columbia University Karen Stolley, Emory University W. Dean Sutcliffe, University of Auckland Alexis Tadié, Université de Paris-Sorbonne Stéphane Van Damme, European University Institute http://www. vol taire.ox.ac. uk/www _ vf/svec/svec _ board.ssi Senior publishing manager Lyn Roberts The Voltaire Foundation is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship and education by publishing worldwide. RUINS PAST MODERNITY IN lTALY, 1744-1836 SABRINA FERRI VOL TAIRE FOUNDA TION OXFORD www.voltaire.ox.ac.uk © 2015 Voltaire Foundation, University of Oxford ISBN 978 0 7294 1171 4 Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment 2015:12 ISSN 0435-2866 Voltaire Foundation 99 Banbury Raad Oxford OX2 6JX, UK www.voltaire.ox.ac.uk A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library The correct style for citing this book is S. Ferri, Ruins past: modernity inltaly, 1744-1836, Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment (Oxford, Voltaire Foundation, 2015) Caver illustration: Giovanni Battis ta Piranesi,Antiquus Bivii ViarumAppiaeet Ardeatinae, prospectus ail II lapidem extra Portam Capenam, Le Antichità romane (Rome, A. Rotilj, 1756), vol.2, pl.2 (second frontispiece), etching, photo courtesy of The Environmental Design Library, University of California, Berkeley, ffN5740 .P49. /"'\ MIX 'tt/ ,J Paper from reepon•lble aouroe1 ~~s FSC"C013056 FSC® (the Forest Stewardship Council) is an independent organization established to promo te responsible management of the world's forests. This book is printed on acid-free paper Printed in the UK by TJ International Ltd, Padstow, Cornwall v ÜXFORD UNIVERSITY STUDIES IN THE ENLIGHTENMENT RUINS PAST MODERNITY IN lTALY, 1744-1836 In an era haunted by its past, modern Europe sought to break with the old; the future and the new became the ideal. In Italy however, where the remains of the past dominated the landscape, mins were a token both of decadence and of the inspiring legacy of tradition. Sabrina Ferri pro poses a counter-narrative to the European story of progress by focusing on the often-marginalized and distinctive case of Ital y. For Italians, mins uncovered the creative potential of the past, transforming it into an inexhaustible source of philosophical speculation and poetic invention whilst simultaneously symbolizing decay, Joss and melancholy. Focusing on the representation of mins by Italian writers, scientists, and artists between the mid-eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Sabrina Ferri explores the culture of the period and traces Italy's complex relationship with its past. Combining the analysis of major works, from Vico's New science to Leopardi's Canti, with that of archivai sources and little-studied materials such as scientific travel journals, letters, and political essays, the author reveals how: • the min became a figure for Italy's uneasy transition into modernity; • the interplay between reflections on the processes of history and speculations on the laws of nature shaped the country's sense of the past and its vision of the future; • the convergence of narratives depicting historical and natural change influenced both the creative arts and the emerging sciences of geology, biology, and archaeology; • the temporal crisis at the dawn of the nineteenth century called into question traditional models for investigating the past and understand ing the present. Intellectual history /literature 1e ighteenth- and nineteenth-century Italy Histoire intellectuelle 1 littérature 1 Italie des dix huitième et dix neuvième siècles Vll Contents List of illustrations Ix Acknowledgments xi ~~(cid:111)(cid:99)(cid:102)(cid:117)(cid:110) 1 1. 'The great fragments of antiquity': ruins and recovery of the past in Giambattista Vico's New science 17 2. 'The ruined cities lie desolate': natural catastrophe and historical change in eighteenth-century Italy 43 3. Time of nature, time of man: ruins and the materiality of the historical imagination 79 4. Melancholies of the modern: nature and history in the late eighteenth-century Picturesque 119 5. The ghostly ruins of Neoclassicism: Alessandro Verri's Roman nights and the posthumous life of the ancient 153 6. The shipwrecks of time: Giacomo Leopardi's poetics of ru ms 187 Epilogue: a glanee back 225 Bibliography 231 Index 251 IX List of illustrations Figure 1: Dipintura, frontispiece of Princip} di scienza nU()Va di Giambattista Vico d'intorno alla comune natura delle nazioni (Naples, Muziana, 1744), photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, B3581 .S4 1744. 20 Figure 2: L'Arbre encyclopédique, frontispiece to vol.l of Pierre Mouchon, Table analytique et raisonnée des matières contenues dans les XXXIII volumes infolio du 'Dictionnaire des sciences, des arts et des métiers, et dans son supplément' (Paris, Panckoucke, 1780), photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, AE25 .E45 index copy 1. 21 Figure 3: Filoni irregolari del piè del Monte Marian al mare (Irregular strata at the foot of Mount Marian by the Sea), Viaggio in Dalmazia dell'abate Alberto Fortis (V enice, A. Milocco, 1774), vol.2, pl.lO, photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, DB406 .F6. 91 Figure 4: Filoni simili a muraglie in riva del mare sotta Rogosniza (Strata in the manner of a wall on the sea shore below Rogosniza), Viaggio in Dalmazia dell'abate Alberto Fortis (Venice, A. Milocco, 1774), vol.2, pl.l2, photo courtesy of The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, DB406 .F6. 92 Figure 5: Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Veduta del sotterraneo Fondamento del Mausoleo, che fu eretto da Elia Adriano Imp[eratore] (View of the subterranean foundations of the Mausoleum built by the Emperor Hadrian), Le Antichità romane (Rome, A. Rotilj, 1756), vol.4, pl.9, etching, photo courtesy of The Environmental Design Library, University of California, Berkeley, ff N5740 .P49. 93 Figure 6: Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Veduta di una parte de' fondamenti del Teatro di Marcello (View showing a part of the foundations of the Theater of Marcellus), Le Antichità romane (Rome, A. Rotilj, 1756), vol.4, pl.32, etching, photo courtesy of The Environmental Design Library, University of California, Berkeley, ff N5740 .P49. 94 Figure 7: Giovanni Battis ta Piranesi, Antiquus Bivii Viarum Appiae et Ardeatinae, prospectus ad II lapidem extra Portam Capenam (Ancient intersection of the Via Appia and Via Ardeatina

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