Le distopiche geometrie di Utopia

The paper is inspired by a story taken from Mania (1997) by Daniele del Giudice, Fuga; at the center of which is one of the most remarkable constructions of the Neapolitan Enlightenment, the ‘Cemetery of the 366 pits’, designed by the architect Ferdinando Fuga. The story is read as a philosophical a...

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Main Author: Carlo Varotti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2021-01-01
Series:Griseldaonline
Subjects:
Online Access:https://griseldaonline.unibo.it/article/view/11451
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spelling doaj-217678b92d1a48918ca208e927b8b96a2021-06-04T06:54:57ZengUniversity of BolognaGriseldaonline1721-47772021-01-0119210511710.6092/issn.1721-4777/114519781Le distopiche geometrie di UtopiaCarlo Varotti0Università degli Studi di ParmaThe paper is inspired by a story taken from Mania (1997) by Daniele del Giudice, Fuga; at the center of which is one of the most remarkable constructions of the Neapolitan Enlightenment, the ‘Cemetery of the 366 pits’, designed by the architect Ferdinando Fuga. The story is read as a philosophical apologue, that must be interpreted in the light of some central themes of Daniele del Giudice’s reflection (treated above all in the novel Atlante occidentale). The modern myth of ‘Utopia’ is the background to this reflection, recalled in one of its most macroscopic original emblems: the geometric design of the city space as an expression of a rational order. The modern myth of the map and the atlas (perfect symbolic translation of scientist planning) finds in Fuga, in the form of the allegorical tale, a sort of parodic reversal, suggesting to the reader an aporia that is at the root of Western Modernity: the awareness that «utopia is necessary », but in its unlimited design potential, is contained «its opposite, its failure».https://griseldaonline.unibo.it/article/view/11451del giudiceilluminismoutopia/distopiahorhkeimerhuxley
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carlo Varotti
spellingShingle Carlo Varotti
Le distopiche geometrie di Utopia
Griseldaonline
del giudice
illuminismo
utopia/distopia
horhkeimer
huxley
author_facet Carlo Varotti
author_sort Carlo Varotti
title Le distopiche geometrie di Utopia
title_short Le distopiche geometrie di Utopia
title_full Le distopiche geometrie di Utopia
title_fullStr Le distopiche geometrie di Utopia
title_full_unstemmed Le distopiche geometrie di Utopia
title_sort le distopiche geometrie di utopia
publisher University of Bologna
series Griseldaonline
issn 1721-4777
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The paper is inspired by a story taken from Mania (1997) by Daniele del Giudice, Fuga; at the center of which is one of the most remarkable constructions of the Neapolitan Enlightenment, the ‘Cemetery of the 366 pits’, designed by the architect Ferdinando Fuga. The story is read as a philosophical apologue, that must be interpreted in the light of some central themes of Daniele del Giudice’s reflection (treated above all in the novel Atlante occidentale). The modern myth of ‘Utopia’ is the background to this reflection, recalled in one of its most macroscopic original emblems: the geometric design of the city space as an expression of a rational order. The modern myth of the map and the atlas (perfect symbolic translation of scientist planning) finds in Fuga, in the form of the allegorical tale, a sort of parodic reversal, suggesting to the reader an aporia that is at the root of Western Modernity: the awareness that «utopia is necessary », but in its unlimited design potential, is contained «its opposite, its failure».
topic del giudice
illuminismo
utopia/distopia
horhkeimer
huxley
url https://griseldaonline.unibo.it/article/view/11451
work_keys_str_mv AT carlovarotti ledistopichegeometriediutopia
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