Shadow Plays: Virtual Realities in an Analog World

Chapter 6, Note 61

As Susan Noakes has written: “The poor of Naples were known as lazzaroni, an originally pejorative epithet by which the Spanish rulers of Naples had, in the seventeenth century, compared the participants in a popular revolt against their rule to Lazarus, the New Testament leper laid outside the rich man’s door; nineteenth century tourists, however, usually make the lazzaroni quite carefree.” “The Rhetoric of Travel: The French Romantic Myth of Naples,” Ethnohistory 33, no. 2 (Spring, 1986), 144. I thank Rebecca Szantyr for calling my attention to this article.

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