Pride in Modesty : Modernist Architecture and the Vernacular Tradition in Italy
Pride in Modesty : Modernist Architecture and the Vernacular Tradition in Italy
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Author(s): Sabatino, Michelangelo
ISBN No.: 9781442612822
Pages: 277
Year: 201105
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 67.55
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

'Sabatino's richly detailed and contextualized history of the vernacular documents a whole other legacy of architectural practice and nationalist ideology in twentieth-century Italy. This revelatory book challenges the dominant assumptions that building under fascism was restricted to competing styles of rhetorical romanità, modernist classicism, and rationalism. It also demonstrates that the vernacular was not homogeneous, but as diverse as the regions of Italy. Through a close reading of literature, ethnography, and architecture, Sabatino shows that these varying interpretations of indigenous dwellings and craft traditions worked toward and against the nation's drive to modernity.'--Emily Braun, Distinguished Professor, Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York 'Pride in Modestyis admirably deft in its handling of the genealogy and appropriation of the vernacular in Italian modernist architecture. Michelangelo Sabatino's study holds an important place in the scholarship of Italian modernism (and modernism in general) because it shifts the focus away from international modernist influences and explores in depth the search for autochthonous roots in the creation of new architectural forms.'--Mia Fuller, Department of Italian Studies, University of California, Berkeley 'Michelangelo Sabatino follows the deep engagement of Italian architects with the vernacular buildings of their country from the 1910s to the 1970s, through both fascism and the boom of the fifties. He shows how the vernacular helped Italian modernist architects to battle academicism, to both engage and resist fascism, to negotiate the transition to postwar democracy, and more generally to address the profound transformations of Italy at that time.


In short, Sabatino has identified a key mediating structure between architecture and society for Italy in those years.'--Francesco Passanti, School of Architecture, University of Texas at Austin.


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