Record ID | harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.13.20150123.full.mrc:887333698:1273 |
Source | harvard_bibliographic_metadata |
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LEADER: 01273nam a2200241K 4500
001 013792979-X
005 20140902093750.0
008 131002s2013 ne a b 001 0 dut d
020 $a9789089790873
035 0 $aocn890000918
035 $aocn824524834
050 4 $aDG807.6$b.R54 2013
082 04 $a940.22$22
100 1 $aRietbergen, P. J. A. N.
245 10 $aRome and the world - the world in Rome :$bthe politics of international culture, 1911-2011 /$cPeter Rietbergen.
260 $aDordrecht :$bRepublic of Letters Publishing,$c2013.
300 $axiv, 373 p. :$bill. (some col.) ;$c25 cm.
504 $aIncludes bbliographical references and index
520 $aDutch cultural historian Peter Rietbergen turns to the politics of international culture in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Rome. Specifically, he addresses the question why and how, since the foundation of the Italian state in 1861, Rome has sought to retain and, indeed, even enlarge its traditional role as the 'mother town' of the culture of mankind, and, also, why and how so many of the world's nations have established their own cultural presence there.
651 0 $aRome (Italy)$xIntellectual life.
650 0 $aLearned institutions and societies$zItaly$zRome.
988 $a20131003
906 $0MH