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An inspector rages against the announcement that police HQ is to
relocate - the way so many of the city's residents already have -
to the mainland... An aspiring author struggles with the inexorable
creep of rentalisation that has forced him to share his apartment,
and life, with 'global pilgrims'... An ageing painter rails against
the liberties taken by tourists, but finds his anger undermined by
his own childhood memories of the place... The Venice presented in
these stories is a far cry from the 'impossibly beautiful',
frozen-in-time city so familiar to the thousands who flock there
every year - a city about which, Henry James once wrote, 'there is
nothing new to be said.' Instead, they represent the other Venice,
the one tourists rarely see: the real, everyday city that Venetians
have to live and work in. Rather than a city in stasis, we see it
at a crossroads, fighting to regain its radical, working-class
soul, regretting the policies that have seen it turn slowly into a
theme park, and taking the pandemic as an opportunity to rethink
what kind of city it wants to be.
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