Showing 61 - 80 results of 116 for search '"Dante"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
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    Introduction by Eduard Vilella

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Dante e l'Arte…”
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  10. 70

    Introduzione by Eduard Vilella

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Dante e l'Arte…”
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    Article
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    Modernités de Bouvard et Pécuchet, Borges, Queneau by Jacques Neefs

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…The two authors inscribe the novel in the great universal literature, from Homer to Pindar, from Dante to Joyce. They did so at a time when Flaubert’s “modernity” was the reference for a profound renewal of critical theory. …”
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    Newman’s Poetry: The Heart of a Victorian Renaissance Project  by Dampi Somoko

    Published 2022-03-01
    “…This is particularly true of the poetic dream in The Dream of Gerontius, which borrows characteristics from both the anonymous Old English poem The Dream of the Rood and Dante’s Divine Comedy. This creative recourse to old literary and aesthetic sources as an inspiration is marked by porosity, hybridity, and subversion when the mutation of the character takes place in a gradual process from de-personification to kenosis. …”
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  19. 79

    Obrazy války v italských městech v kázáních observanta a v cestovním deníku řeholníka z první poloviny 15. století by Jan Stejskal

    Published 2015-10-01
    “… At the beginning of the Renaissance, nobody asked questions about the natural state of mankind – that is, whether it is war or peace – as they had verifiably done on the threshold of the High Middle Ages. Dante defined war as an undesirable phenomenon devastating “poor Italy”. …”
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  20. 80

    Francés Carrós Pardo de la Casta, un humanista para el Cancionero general by Estela Pérez Bosch

    Published 2005-12-01
    “…El poema, compuesto en castellano, puede ser leído como una versión lírica de la Regoneixença e moral consideració sobre los vicis e forces d´amor, una segunda obra de Carrós escrita en prosa catalana medieval que plantea una digresión sobe el amor humano desde la perspectiva de un moralismo laico que pone de relieve la deuda contraída con Dante y especialmente con Petrarca. En la misma línea que el Petrarca de los Trionfi y del Canzoniere, ambos textos inciden en los efectos más humanos del amor y proponen un uso muy particular de la alegoría, no solo con valor didáctico sino también poético y literario. …”
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