Results 21 to 30 of about 1,176 (174)

Giovanna Zaganelli, Sulla semiotica dell’arte. Aspetti plastici e narrativi del Petrarca

open access: yesEnthymema, 2016
Recensiamo Zaganelli, Giovanna. Sulla semiotica dell’arte. Aspetti plastici e narrativi del Petrarca illustrato. Bologna: Fausto Lupetti Editore, 2012. Stampa.   Review of Zaganelli, Giovanna. Sulla semiotica dell’arte.
Giovanni Capecchi
doaj   +1 more source

La grammatica dello spazio nel Petrarca latino: le epistole e i loro intertesti medievali

open access: yesQuaderns d'Italià, 2006
Studi recenti hanno dimostrato in Petrarca un’autocoscienza lucidissima del significato ideologico della rappresentazione geografica e insieme del senso che questa assume nella biografia culturale del poeta. Con l’Itinerarium Petrarca cerca di superare l’
Francesco Stella
doaj   +1 more source

Un apéndice a los Triumphi de Petrarca: el Triumphus Fame IIa

open access: yesAnuario de Letras Modernas, 2018
Pese a la importancia de los Triumphi de Petrarca, aún no hay una edición crítica que ofrezca una versión definitiva del texto. En 1950, Roberto Weiss publicó por primera vez de forma íntegra este fragmento del Triumphus Fame; la reaparición de estos ...
José Luis Quezada A.
doaj   +1 more source

Sotto le stelle del Petrarca: Vidas cruzadas (un episodio del petrarquismo en España)

open access: yesRevista de Filología Española, 2009
En este artículo se estudia la traducción de los Triumphi de Petrarca y el comentario de Bernardo Illicino por Antonio de Obregón (1512). Se demuestra la dependencia de la Vida de Petrarca de Obregón de la trazada por Francisco de Madrid en su versión ...
Juan Miguel Valero Moreno
doaj   +1 more source

Agreement of poetics of the book of poems Básně Jána Kollára with the poetics of Book of Songs of Francesco Petrarca [PDF]

open access: yesSlovenska Literatura, 2002
The study Agreement of poetics of the book of poems Básně Jána Kollára (The Poems of Ján Kollár) with the poetics of Book of Songs of Francesco Petrarca was written to the 700th birth anniversary of F.
Pavol Koprda
doaj  

Il legame tra lo spazio e l’individuo in Petrarca e Leopardi

open access: yesItalianistica Debreceniensis, 2017
The interdisciplinary approach in history makes it possible to widen researchers’ perspectives. Italian literature is one medium in which we can reflect the relationship between geography, identity and imagination.
Julia Dabasi
doaj   +1 more source

Crossroads of the Life of Vittorio Alfieri

open access: yesJournal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, EarlyView.
Abstract This article examines Vittorio Alfieri's Life as a deliberately constructed narrative of cultural, linguistic, and political self‐fashioning within eighteenth‐century European intellectual networks. Rather than treating the autobiography as a transparent record of experience, the article argues that Alfieri retrospectively reorganizes his ...
Sara Gallegati
wiley   +1 more source

Laura, Francesco e Tassoni. Una critica secentesca agli amori del Petrarca

open access: yesGriseldaonline, 2019
In his Considerazioni sopra le Rime del Petrarca (Modena, 1609), Alessandro Tassoni deconstructs Petrarch’s love for Laura: the Poet is here depicted as some sort of foolish hypocrit that hasn’t been able to fulfill his (merely sexual) desires for Laura.
Andrea Lazzarini
doaj   +1 more source

Humanism at the Council of Constance. Diego de Anaya, Classical Manuscripts and Education in Salamanca

open access: yesRenaissance Studies, EarlyView.
Abstract Due to their prolonged and multicultural nature, councils functioned historically as hubs for the exchange of ideas, discourse, diplomacy and rhetoric, reflecting broader cultural trends. In the Middle Ages, no international forums were comparable to ecumenical councils, where diverse and influential groups from various regions convened to ...
Federico Tavelli
wiley   +1 more source

‘Why Did You Go to Buda?’: The Humanist Sodality and Mantuan’s Rustic Idyll in Bohuslaus of Hassenstein’s Ecloga sive Idyllion Budae (1503)☆

open access: yesRenaissance Studies, EarlyView.
Abstract In the late fifteenth century, the Hungarian royal court at Buda was home to a cosmopolitan community of humanists. In early modern historiography, this cultural milieu has often been interpreted as one of the new, emergent ‘centres’ of the Renaissance in East Central Europe.
Eva Plesnik
wiley   +1 more source

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