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