Results 1 to 10 of about 490 (154)
Mobility and migration in Byzantium: who gets to tell the story? [PDF]
This article underlines the importance of approaching written sources for what they are: authorial constructs. This is true also for depictions of mobility and migration. Byzantine authors instrumentalized these for their own purposes beyond the event at hand. Authorial focus, along with the requirements of the chosen literary genre, is also the reason
Rapp C.
europepmc +2 more sources
Au travers d’une double approche autobiographique et biographique de la figure de Bob Dylan, on se proposera d’observer les renégociations génériques conséquentes à la parution du premier volume de son autobiographie Chronicles, volume 1. En effet, cette
Aurélien Bécue
exaly +3 more sources
Mélange des genres littéraires dans Mémoires d'Hadrien de Marguerite Yourcenar [PDF]
Dans cette étude, nous allons mettre l'accent sur le mélange des genres littéraires dans Mémoires d'Hadrien tels que l'autobiographie, l'Histoire, les mémoires et certains autres genres comme (fable, mythes, roman, psychanalyse et roman épistolaire) Nous
Amr Elsayed Mohamed Abdelrehim
doaj +1 more source
PARANOÏA: la vie secrète de Salvador Dali
En 1942, Salvador Dali, âgé de trente-huit ans, termine son autobiographie La vie secrète de Salvador Dali. Il prétend s’y livrer au lecteur en toute candeur. Mais c’est un leurre.
Maarten van Buuren
doaj +5 more sources
Otobiyografik özne geleneksel olarak erkektir. Bu sadece yazarlığın ve öz farkındalığın öncelikle erkeklere atfettiği, tarihsel olarak belirlenmiş toplumsal cinsiyet ilişkileri meselesi değildir, aynı zamanda otobiyografi ve otobiyografi teorisi söylemi ...
Martina Wagner-Egelhaaf +1 more
doaj +1 more source
This is an interview about Thomas Wild’s autobiographical book Instants d’Afrique, followed by a review. Résumé Il s’agit d’un entretien autour du livre autobiographique de Thomas Wild, Instants d’Afrique suivi d’une recension.
Christophe Premat, Thomas Wild
doaj +1 more source
Putting Galileo in his Place: Geographical Origins and the Rhetoric of Scholarly Credibility☆
Abstract While in theory frowned upon, comments on the (regional) provenance of scholars frequently found their way into the scholarly debates of the Republic of Letters. This article uses early responses to Galileo Galilei's Sidereus Nuncius as a case study to explore various broader assumptions and associations underlying the use of such comments on ...
Anna‐Luna Post
wiley +1 more source
The Knightly Brothers of Bernard of Clairvaux and the Twelfth‐Century Cistercian Lay Monk*
Abbot Bernard of Clairvaux (r. 1115–1153) was a prominent twelfth‐century religious leader whose knightly family collectively converted to monastic life with him in adulthood around 1113. Following Clairvaux's foundation in 1115, Bernard's brothers held roles of significant estate seniority despite their own professional limitations as newly converted ...
Joseph Millan‐Cole
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT British author and literary scholar Abdulrazak Gurnah, born in Zanzibar in 1948 and awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2021, makes significant contributions to the memory and critique of German colonialism in East Africa and its aftermath both in Tanzania and in Germany. This study examines Gurnah's novels Paradise (1994) and Afterlives
Dirk Göttsche
wiley +1 more source
Dispossessed by norms like autonomy: Rethinking relational autobiography with Butler and Berlant
Abstract From the 1980s onwards, relationality has been a key term in autobiography scholarship and life‐writing studies, as it describes how the self in many instances of autobiographical literature emerges in relation to others. Yet, confusion reigns about the exact meaning and applicability of the term relational autobiography.
Kim Schoof
wiley +1 more source

