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5 Hitler’s Plan for Imperial Berlin

© 2022 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

© 2022 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. List of Illustrations vii
  4. Foreword xiii
  5. Acknowledgments xv
  6. List of Abbreviations xvii
  7. Introduction 1
  8. 1 Travelling to See the Buildings
  9. 1 The Myth of the Duce as Inaugurator 17
  10. 2 Building and Fighting 20
  11. 3 Buildings Built to “Endure” 25
  12. 4 In the City Where Fascism Was Born 33
  13. 5 Architects in the Dictator’s Entourage 38
  14. 2 Mussolini’s Rome
  15. 1 The Third Rome 43
  16. 2 Demolishing “with No Holds Barred” 49
  17. 3 The Keen Eye 51
  18. 4 Visits to Building Sites in Rome 55
  19. 5 Architecture and the Legacy of Fascism 60
  20. 6 Rome, “Kingdom of the Unexpected” 66
  21. 7 Rome and Berlin: Parallel Action 72
  22. 8 The North-South Imperial Axis 78
  23. 3 At Palazzo Venezia
  24. 1 The Success of the Exhibition of the Fascist Revolution 83
  25. 2 Restoring Augustus 87
  26. 3 Doubts about Terragni 92
  27. 4 The Rejection of Brasini’s Grandiose Architecture 96
  28. 5 Mussolini’s Oversights 100
  29. 6 Architecture for a Politics of Domination 104
  30. 7 Ponti’s Suggestions 108
  31. 8 “Rendering unto Caesar What Is Caesar’s” 112
  32. 9 Moretti Instead of Piacentini? 115
  33. 4 In the Architect’s Shoes
  34. 1 The Duce Approves 121
  35. 2 The Man with the Diktats 123
  36. 3 With Pencil in Hand 127
  37. 4 Advising the Architects 135
  38. 5 Zigzagging Forward 142
  39. 6 “I’m an Expert on Architecture” 146
  40. 5 Piacentini and Mussolini
  41. 1 The Architect of the Littorian Order 153
  42. 2 A Special Rapport 158
  43. 3 Committed to the Party 160
  44. 4 Side by Side 164
  45. 5 In Praise of Organizational Perseverance 169
  46. 6 Architecture towards a Style
  47. 1 In Rome’s Città Universitaria 174
  48. 2 “Life Today” Requires a “Unity of Direction” in Architecture Too 177
  49. 3 The E42 and the Matter of Style 180
  50. 4 The Swing towards Classicism 184
  51. 5 At the E42 “History Is Built” 188
  52. 6 Terragni’s Challenge, Pagano’s Silence, Bottai’s Dissent 193
  53. 7 The Totalitarian Acceleration and Architecture
  54. 1 Architecture for the Myths of the Totalitarian State 199
  55. 2 Piacentini’s Architectural Unity 202
  56. 3 For Imperial Rome 204
  57. 4 The 1941 “Variante” of Rome’s Urban Development Plan 211
  58. 5 Hitler’s Plan for Imperial Berlin 216
  59. 6 For Imperial Milan 221
  60. 7 A National “Unity of Direction” 224
  61. 8 A Private Monopoly in a Totalitarian Regime 231
  62. Epilogue 233
  63. Notes 245
  64. Index of Names and Subjects 301
  65. Index of Places 321
Mussolini, Architect
This chapter is in the book Mussolini, Architect
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