Best of
Italy

1994

Florence & Tuscany


Christopher Catling - 1994
    From viewing some of the world's greatest Renaissance art to wandering around designer boutiques. Discover a whole new side of Florence and Tuscany with the Eyewitness Travel Guide. This guide will give you practical information without any hassle. All of the important towns and other places to visit are described individually. Within each town or city, there is detailed information on important buildings and other sites. Make the most of your trip with the Eyewitness Travel Guide.

Gaspara Stampa: Selected Poems


Gaspara Stampa - 1994
    A highly skilled musician, Stampa produced some of the most musical poetry in the Italian language. Her sonnets of unrequited love speak in a language of honest passion and profound loss. They look forward to the women writers of the nineteenth century and are a milestone in women's literature. This dual-language edition of selected poems presents, along with the Italian original, the first English translation of Stampa's work. It includes an introduction to the poet and her work, a note on the translation, and provides the reader with notes to the poems, a bibliography, and a first-line index. DUAL-LANGUAGE POETRY Introduction, bibliography, first-line index.

Possessing Nature: Museums, Collecting, and Scientific Culture in Early Modern Italy


Paula Findlen - 1994
    Yet fifty years later the first museums of natural history had appeared in Italy, dedicated to the marvels of nature. Italian patricians, their curiosity fueled by new voyages of exploration and the humanist rediscovery of nature, created vast collections as a means of knowing the world and used this knowledge to their greater glory.Drawing on extensive archives of visitors' books, letters, travel journals, memoirs, and pleas for patronage, Paula Findlen reconstructs the lost social world of Renaissance and Baroque museums. She follows the new study of natural history as it moved out of the universities and into sixteenth- and seventeenth-century scientific societies, religious orders, and princely courts. Findlen argues convincingly that natural history as a discipline blurred the border between the ancients and the moderns, between collecting in order to recover ancient wisdom and the development of new textual and experimental scholarship. Her vivid account reveals how the scientific revolution grew from the constant mediation between the old forms of knowledge and the new.

Paintings in the Uffizi and Pitti Galleries


Mina Gregori - 1994
    Over 800 color plates. Boxed.

Looking at Giacometti


David Sylvester - 1994
    It takes students from world-renowned art critic David Sylvester’s first visits to Giacometti’s studio in the late 1940s to the author’s prolonged sitting for the artist’s portrait of him in the 1960 and reflections on his complete oeuvre after Giacometti’s death. A compelling mixture of biography and criticism, and including a sixteen-page insert of black and white photographs by Patricia Matisse, this book sheds new light on twentieth-century art and thought.

Sicilian-American Pasta: 99 Recipes You Can't Refuse


John Penza - 1994
    Rich in history and shaped by innovation, these 99 recipes represent a blend of centuries of delicate variation and their refinements of modern cooking techniques.

Piero Della Francesca: San Francesco, Arezzo


Marilyn Aronberg Lavin - 1994
    Each book also contains a comprehensive text, a biography of the artist, a bibliography, and a glossary.

Mazzini


Denis Mack Smith - 1994
    A vigorous proponent of nationalism, pre-eminent figure in the struggle for Italian independence and unity, and fascinating personality, his ideas were influential throughout Europe. Yet successive Italian governments, fearing the consequences of his belief in democracy and revolution, deliberately obscured his achievements: there have been few modern studies of Mazzini and no biography in English since 1902.Denis Mack Smith's major new account reexamines Mazzini's ideological impact and his place in the political and intellectual world of the mid-nineteenth century. Based on profound scholarship and immense archival research, the book recreates Mazzini's long years of poverty and exile in London and the networks of friends, associates, and enemies that brought him into contact with the greatest European figures of the age, among them Marx, Carlyle, Mill, and Bakunin. Mazzini is revealed as an acute but largely unrecognized prophet of the idea of a European community: he saw nationalism as a step toward larger and more harmonious confederations. Adept at inspiring admiration and animosity equally, Mazzini affronted the pope by his demand for religious reform, Karl Marx by his powerful critique of communism, and many of his less enlightened contemporaries for his campaigns on behalf of social security, universal suffrage, and women's rights. Yet he was universally venerated for his brilliance, humanity, and wisdom, and even his critics agreed that he left an enduring mark on his time.

Michelin: Italy Road Atlas


Guides Touristiques Michelin - 1994
    The new cover design highlights the focus on road travel adventures and discovery, while inside, the new, simplified page numbers make it easy to locate the next page of the journey. Small locator maps on each page clearly situate the map page within the context of the larger area for better navigation. Extremely practical town and city map pages include a map of the town center and the surrounding area. Of course, all the atlases feature Michelin's accurate mapping, updated each year by dedicated Michelin teams, where you'll find Michelin picks for scenic drives

The War of the Fists: Popular Culture and Public Violence in Late Renaissance Venice


Robert C. Davis - 1994
    These little battles were partly festive battle, partly sport, and partly thinly veiled plebeian mayhem: they could involve as many as a thousand fighters on each side and attracted crowds of thirty thousand or more. Their importance in the city's plebeian life makes bridge battles an extremely valuable point of entry for exploring structures of Venetian popular culture, a task which Robert Davis attempts at four levels: the social geography of Venetian factionalism; the combat itself, and its relationship to social culture; the festive world which grew up around the encounters; and the response of Venice's patrician state to this largely uncontrollable worker celebration. From the study there emerges a popular world often surprisingly rich: with plebeian honor, status, and neighborhood loyalties that flourished in parallel and sometimes in competition with a patrician domination of urban life at the city's geographic center. In a sense, these encounters represented popular culture in the making, as Venice's marginal classes fashioned out of apparent chaos the ritual structures they needed to satisfy social needs that otherwise went unmet in their aristocratic state. As a microhistory that uses Venetian bridge battles as a key to understanding many facets of popular society, The War of the Fists will be of interest to social historians and historical anthropologists, as well as historians of urban society, gender, workers, sports, social geography, popular art and culture, and the absolutist state.

Floyd on Italy: A Celebration of Italian Food and Italy


Keith Floyd - 1994
    Pages crisp , clean and flat, appears untouched. With a selection of classic recipes from all kinds of antipasti, pasta and pizza to wild boar stew and red mullet, this beautiful book recreates the best of the world's best food. As presented by the inimitable Keith Floyd. (cook)

Ambrogio Lorenzetti: The Palazzo Pubblico, Siena


Randolph Starn - 1994
    Each book also contains a comprehensive text, a biography of the artist, a bibliography, and a glossary.

Gli Antipasti: Antipasti and Other Appetizers


Anna Del Conte - 1994