The Barbarians  

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*"The fear of being overwhelmed and destroyed by barbarian hordes is as old as the history of civilization. Pictures of desertification, gardens and palaces looted by nomads in disrepair in which graze their flocks are recurrent in the literature of decadence from antiquity to the present day." -- [[Wolfgang Schivelbusch]]. *"The fear of being overwhelmed and destroyed by barbarian hordes is as old as the history of civilization. Pictures of desertification, gardens and palaces looted by nomads in disrepair in which graze their flocks are recurrent in the literature of decadence from antiquity to the present day." -- [[Wolfgang Schivelbusch]].
-*"Elegance, purity and size, which were the principles of our art, have gradually surrendered to the new style, frivolous and sliced, that these times, talent, superficial, have adopted. Brains, for education and habit, can not think of anything else that clothes, fashion, gossip, reading novels and moral dissipation, are struggling to experience the delights, more elaborate and less febrile, the science and art. Beethoven writes for those brains, and in this he seems to have some success, if I believe the praise that, in every way, I feel flourish for his latest work. "From [[The Quarterly Musical Magazine and Review]] of 1825 , which dealt with the [[Ninth symphony of Beethoven]] +* "... elegance, purity and measure are gradually surrendering to a new, frivolous and pompous style adopted by the superficial talents of our time." --[[The Quarterly Musical Magazine and Review]] of 1825 , which dealt with the [[Ninth symphony of Beethoven]]
*"[[Zu Micky-Maus]]" a fragment from the writings of Walter Benjamin *"[[Zu Micky-Maus]]" a fragment from the writings of Walter Benjamin

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I barbari is a collection of essays by Italian writer Alessandro Baricco, first published in the La Repubblica in 2006.

The content of the essay is introduced by four mottoes:

  • "The fear of being overwhelmed and destroyed by barbarian hordes is as old as the history of civilization. Pictures of desertification, gardens and palaces looted by nomads in disrepair in which graze their flocks are recurrent in the literature of decadence from antiquity to the present day." -- Wolfgang Schivelbusch.
  • "It was not hard to talk to him. I called the sheriff. But I did not know what to say. What do you say to someone who by his own admission has no soul? Why you should say something? I thought about it much. But he was nothing compared to what would come later." --Cormac McCarthy, is the first pages of No Country for Old Men.

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "The Barbarians" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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