PREFACE
Note:PRE@@@@@@@@@
Yellow highlight | Location: 46
men lined up at barbershops to have their beards shaved off.
Note:DOPO IL CROLLO DEI TALEBANI
Yellow highlight | Location: 46
Women painted their nails
Note:INTANTO
Yellow highlight | Location: 47
postcards of beautiful Indian movie stars,
Note:ALTRO MERCATO PRIMA-NERO
Yellow highlight | Location: 48
adding colors like brown, peach, and green
Note:COLORI AGGIUNTI AI BURKA
Yellow highlight | Location: 49
better fabric, finer embroidery,
Note:DOMANDA DI VELI SEMPRE MIGLIORI
Yellow highlight | Location: 51
she found her own services every bit as popular as the serious business of health and welfare.
Note:IL PARRUCCHIERE AMERICANO A KABUL IN MISSIONE...CREDEVA DI SOCCORRERE
Yellow highlight | Location: 53
elections, education, a free press.
Note:EQUIVICI SULL OGGETTO DELLA LIBERTÀ
Yellow highlight | Location: 54
superficial things were just as important.
Note:TUTTAVIA
Yellow highlight | Location: 54
right to shave may be found in no international treaty
Note:PURTROPPO
Yellow highlight | Location: 57
artworks like the giant Bamiyan Buddhas
Note:UNA CONCEZIONE ANGUSTA DELL ESTETICA
Yellow highlight | Location: 57
a different view of the frivolous, consumerist impulses
Note:L ERRORE
Yellow highlight | Location: 58
buying consumer electronics?”
Note:LA TRISTE CELERAZIONE DELLA LIBERTÀ
Yellow highlight | Location: 59
Anna Quindlen in a 2001 Christmas column
Note:L INTRISTITA
Yellow highlight | Location: 60
our persistent interest in variety, adornment, and new sensory pleasures is created by advertising,
Note:LA TEORIA SOTTO...BISOGNI INDOTRI
Yellow highlight | Location: 61
“I do not need an alpaca swing coat, a tourmaline brooch,
Note:NN M SERVE!!!!!
Yellow highlight | Location: 64
Why buy a green burka when you’re a poor peasant and already have two blue ones?
Note:VALE X TUTTI...PERCHÈ DIPINGERSI LE UNGHIE
Yellow highlight | Location: 66
Yet liberated Kabul had no ubiquitous advertising
Note:TUTTAVIA
Yellow highlight | Location: 67
our relation to aesthetic value is too fundamental to be explained by commercial mind control.
Note:IPOTESI
Yellow highlight | Location: 68
Human beings know the world, and each other, through our senses.
Note:I SENSI
Yellow highlight | Location: 69
appearances are not just potentially deceiving but frivolous
Note:LA DOPPIA LEZIONE DELLA VITA
Yellow highlight | Location: 71
We learn to contrast surface to substance,
Note:ALTRA LEZIONE
Yellow highlight | Location: 72
sun does not go around the earth.
Note:LEZIONE
Yellow highlight | Location: 75
When we declare that mere surface cannot possibly have legitimate value, we deny human experience
Note:MA ANCHE IL CONTRARIO È IMPRATICABILE
Yellow highlight | Location: 76
We veer madly between overvaluing and undervaluing the importance of aesthetics.
Note:ESITO
Yellow highlight | Location: 78
This book seeks to untangle those confusions,
Note:LO SCOPO DEL LIBRO
Yellow highlight | Location: 78
the nature of aesthetic value
Note:Ttttttttt
Yellow highlight | Location: 80
a healthy balance between substance and surface,
Note:SCOPO
Yellow highlight | Location: 82
“authenticity,”
Note:Tttttttt
Yellow highlight | Location: 83
aesthetic authorities consider a prime measure of worth.
Note:L AUTENTICITÀ
Yellow highlight | Location: 85
Universal CityWalk is deliberately fake.
Note:TRA LA E LA FERNANDO VALEY
Yellow highlight | Location: 85
the open-air shopping mall “a great simulacrum
Note:NOMIGNOLI
Yellow highlight | Location: 86
the quintessential, idealized L.A.”
Yellow highlight | Location: 88
adorned with bright signs, colorful tiles, video screens, murals, and such playful accessories
Note:FACCIATE
Yellow highlight | Location: 89
encouraged its tenants to let their decorative imaginations run wild.
Note:DIVERSAMENTE DA ALTRI CENTRI COMMERCIALI
Yellow highlight | Location: 90
artificial beach
Note:PRESENZE
Yellow highlight | Location: 90
palm trees.
Yellow highlight | Location: 90
fountain shoots water up through the sidewalk.
Yellow highlight | Location: 91
vintage neon signs.
Yellow highlight | Location: 92
condemned as an inauthentic
Note:QUANDO APRÌ NEL 1993
Yellow highlight | Location: 93
a phony refuge from the diversity and conflict of a city
Note:CONDANNATA COME FUGA DAL REALE...RIOTS
Yellow highlight | Location: 93
“Exhibit A in a hot new trend among the beleaguered middle classes: bunkering,”
Note:UN NOTO GIORNALISTA
Yellow highlight | Location: 95
a petting zoo
Note:UN ALTRO
Yellow highlight | Location: 95
Almost immediately, CityWalk became not a bunker but a grand mixing zone.
Note:LA REAZIONE DELLA GENTE
Yellow highlight | Location: 96
CityWalk was full of people.
Yellow highlight | Location: 96
they were all grinning,”
Yellow highlight | Location: 97
a beloved hangout,
Note:IL CORSO CENTRAL
Yellow highlight | Location: 98
“the most vital public space in Los Angeles,”
Note:OGGI
Yellow highlight | Location: 104
the assumption that artifice and interaction are contradictory,
Note:CONFUTATO
Yellow highlight | Location: 106
a space where people from many different backgrounds can enjoy themselves together.
Note:LA DIVERSITÀ
Yellow highlight | Location: 108
South African of Johannesburg’s Montecasino, a casino that replicates a Tuscan village,
Note:QUI ANCHE IL CIELO È FALSO
Yellow highlight | Location: 109
imported cobblestones
Note | Location: 109
PRESENZE
Yellow highlight | Location: 109
an old Fiat accumulating parking tickets
Yellow highlight | Location: 110
Montecasino attracts a racially mixed crowd,
Note:ANXHE QUI...DIVERSITÀ
Yellow highlight | Location: 111
Its deracinated design is central to its appeal.
Note:SENZA RADICI
Yellow highlight | Location: 112
“Montecasino imposes nothing on anyone. It is completely, exuberantly fake,”
Note:LIBERTÀ
Yellow highlight | Location: 113
it is this fakeness that ensures its egalitarian popularity.
Note:COME LAS VEGAS
Yellow highlight | Location: 113
Blacks and whites feel equally at home
Note:LA VERA UGUAGL
Yellow highlight | Location: 114
The price of democracy, it would seem, is inauthenticity.”
Note:TESI
Yellow highlight | Location: 115
Maybe we’ve misunderstood the meaning and value of authenticity.
Note:DUBBIO
Yellow highlight | Location: 116
While “art” can certainly be a meaningful category, it can also be deceptive,
Note:IL RISCHIO DI SEPARARE ARTE E VITA
Yellow highlight | Location: 118
Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, in New York
Note:NELLE SUE CANTINE SCOPERTA L OPERA DI MICHELANGELO DESIGNER
Yellow highlight | Location: 120
April 2002, Timothy Clifford,
Note:LO SCOPRITORE
Yellow highlight | Location: 129
commentators denounce art museums for “dumbing-down” their exhibits with motorcycles, guitars, and Armani clothes,
Note:L ACCUSA
Yellow highlight | Location: 130
the line between art and artifacts was not always so rigid.
Note:TUTRAVIA
Yellow highlight | Location: 131
“Renaissance artists of the highest caliber were commissioned to design
Note:MICHELANGELO DESIGNER
Yellow highlight | Location: 131
lamps, salt cellars and tapestries,”
Note:OGGETTI SU CUI LAVORÒ
Yellow highlight | Location: 133
You no longer have to be a Medici to enjoy aesthetic abundance,
Note:OGGI VOGLIAMO ESSERE TUTTI DEI MEDICI
Yellow highlight | Location: 134
the profusion of style in everyday life.
Note:OGGETTO DEL LIBRO
Yellow highlight | Location: 136
aesthetic value is subjective and can be discovered only through experience,
Note:TESI 1
Yellow highlight | Location: 136
sensory pleasure and meaning are fundamental, biologically based human wants
Note:TESI 2
Yellow highlight | Location: 138
Decoration and adornment are neither higher nor lower than “real” life. They are part of it.
Note:TESI 3
Yellow highlight | Location: 139
One THE AESTHETIC IMPERATIVE