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The Ruin of the Eternal City
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Table of Contents

Introduction
New approaches to preservation problems
Note on terminology
Acknowledgments
PART I
1. Preservation Practices in Ancient and Medieval Rome
2. Inventing a Preservation Program in Fifteenth-Century Rome
3. A Sixteenth-Century Meteor in the Roman Forum
PART II
4. The Colosseum
5. The Pantheon
6. The Ponte Santa Maria
Conclusion: rethinking preservation practices in Renaissance Rome
Appendix of archival documents
Sources and works cited

About the Author

David Karmon is Assistant Professor of Art History, College of the Holy Cross.

Reviews

"One might have thought it nearly impossible at this late date to write a new book containing a well argued, fresh perspective on fundamental features of Descartes's philosophy. With this book, David Cunning has achieved that nearly impossible feat. The accomplishment is especially remarkable given his focus on the Meditations, which is one of the most thoroughly studied works of philosophy in existence."--Mind
"Karmon sheds light on how preservation and restoration have become practices that modern culture has separated from each other, whereas the term 'instaurare,' as favored by humanists such as Biondo Flavio in the Quattrocento tended to weave these meanings together. This distinction has constituted a distorting lens on which historians have relied all too often...and it deserves very close attention on the part of architects, who are so often called upon to
confront its implications."--Casabella
"Karmon does an extraordinary job when using the archival evidence to describe the politics of restoration. He provides a clear narrative about how different individuals understood preservation in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries."--Bryn Mawr Classical Review
"Birth, death, and resurrection are written on every street in Rome. David Karmon tells a rich and passionate history of the efforts to preserve antiquity in the Renaissance city. With new research and a fresh approach, a magical landscape emerges of half-buried ruins prevailing in the midst of imperial ambitions."--Christy Anderson, author of Inigo Jones and the Classical Tradition
"In this startlingly original book, David Karmon has virtually opened a new field, showing how--for six hundred years!--the city of Rome has fostered the preservation of its ancient monuments to inspire residents and visitors, control traffic, reduce construction costs, and sustain the myth of the Eternal City."--Ingrid D. Rowland, author of Giordano Bruno, The Scarith of Scornello, and The Culture of the High Renaissance
"This is a book with a bold, overarching thesis and richly textured component parts...Hopefully it will inspire others to look anew at Rome's ancient churches and their even more tortured history of preservation and destruction."--The Catholic Historical Review

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