THE AESTHETICS OF RUINS, by Robert Ginsberg. Amsterdam and New York:
Rodopi Press, 2004, xx+ 538 pp., $144.00 cloth.
The recent resurgence in the trend
toward architectural restoration has
meant that the subject of ruins has
undergone something of a revival.
Against the vaguely postmodern inclination
to render the past kitsch,
the term heritage has had the effect of
conferring value upon place. If the antihistoric
rhetoric of modernity (and to
some extent postmodernity) has lost
favor, then there is no smaller danger
than that buildings are restored merely
by dint of their age despite their aesthetic
attributes. What is at stake in this
restorative trend is the loss of a ruin's
original vitality, thereby reducing the
artifact to an artifice.
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