Italy and the Arts

Reading Cities

16 min · 18. mar. 2025
episode Reading Cities cover

Description

What if cities could be read like books, their streets and buildings inscribed with hidden histories? In this episode, we explore Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities and the idea of the urban palimpsest through Zaira—a city defined not by its monuments but by the memories embedded in its spaces. Using this lens, we rethink how to experience Italian cities, from the Colosseum’s battle scars to Florence’s worn staircases. Discover how slowing down and looking closer can reveal the unseen layers of history shaping the cities we think we know.

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episode The Renaissance Paradox artwork

The Renaissance Paradox

In this episode, we dive into the complex life of a concept: the Renaissance. Far from being a stable period label, the Renaissance was constructed both from within—by thinkers like Petrarch and Vasari—and later by historians like Burckhardt, who saw it as the cradle of modern critical judgment. But is this narrative still viable? We explore how the Renaissance became both a cultural canon and a historiographical puzzle, questioned by medievalists, feminists, and social historians alike. Despite its contested status, the term endures—less for its explanatory power and more for its seductive aura. What remains is not a coherent historical era, but an evocative label, rich in contradictions. Based on Stefano Cracolici, Renaissance, in Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies (2007).

9. okt. 202519 min