Shadow Plays: Virtual Realities in an Analog World

Chapter 6, Note 65

As Susan Noakes writes (“The Rhetoric of Travel,” 146): “The life of the lazzaroni (no longer connoting leprosy or even poverty so much as ‘color,’ in the sense of the ‘picturesque’); the unhurried tempo of life (a vacationer’s way of viewing what would, at home, be seen as economic stagnation); the poetic nature of the common people, especially evidenced in popular Neapolitan songs, ‘villanelle’ (the dialect of which visitors were most unlikely to understand): all these motifs might have been applied to other places, but many nineteenth century French writers identified them particularly with Naples. Naples’ mythogeographic position was important, too, as a gateway to Asia and Africa.”

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