Results for ' Italian fiction'

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  1. Fictions of the Pose: Rembrandt against the Italian Renaissance. By Harry Berger, Jr.K. D. White - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (5):710-710.
  2.  30
    Fictions of the Pose: Rembrandt against the Italian Renaissance.Wayne Andersen - 2002 - Common Knowledge 8 (2):417-417.
  3.  5
    Objects in Italian life and culture: fiction, migration, and artificiality.Paolo Bartoloni - 2016 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Meaningful places -- Fictional objects -- Migrant objects -- Multicultural and transcultural objects -- Objects as props -- Conclusion.
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  4.  4
    Book Reviews : Italian Feminism and Literature: a Viewpoint On the World: Carol Lazzaro-Weis From Margins to Mainstream, Feminism and Fictional Modes in Italian Women's Writing, 1968-1990 Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993, xvii + 223 pp., ISBN 0-8122-1438-2. [REVIEW]Laura Fortini - 1995 - European Journal of Women's Studies 2 (3):411-413.
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  5.  14
    Italian Research on Utopia and Utopianism.Vita Fortunati - 2016 - Utopian Studies 27 (3):468-479.
    The Italian tradition of utopian studies is indebted to Luigi Firpo, who investigated Thomas More’s Utopia and the utopias of the Italian Counter-Reformation. Although Firpo was a scholar of political science, he highlighted the importance of the literary aspects of utopias. The ability to combine the political aspects of utopias with their fictional and literary aspects may be seen in his important introduction to More’s Utopia. Thus, Firpo’s school has tried to keep these two aspects united, while other (...)
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  6.  47
    Assertability conditions of epistemic (and fictional) attitudes and mood variation.Mari Alda - unknown - Proceedings of SALT 26.
    Italian is a well-known exception to the cross-linguistic generalization according to which `belief' predicates are indicative selectors across languages. We newly propose that languages that select the subjunctive with epistemic predicates allow us to see a systematic polysemy between what we call an expressive-`belief' (featuring only a doxastic dimension) and an inquisitive-`belief' (featuring both a doxastic and an epistemic dimension conveying doxastic certainty (in the assertion) and epistemic uncertainty (in the presupposition)). We offer several previously unseen contrasts proving this (...)
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  7.  10
    MOSSELMANS, BERT (eds). Science and Art: The Red Book of Einstein meets Magritte. VUB UP pp. 262+ xxviii, incl. b & w figures.£ 80. BERGER, HARRY JR. Fictions of the Pose: Rembrandt Against the Italian Renaissance. Cambridge UP. [REVIEW]Dry Landscape Garden - 2001 - British Journal of Aesthetics 41 (1).
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  8.  37
    On the Fiction of the Retroaction of the Condition in Contracts.Giuliano Bacigalupo - 2016 - Philosophia Scientiae 20:167-183.
    In this paper, I focus on the fiction of the retroaction of the condition in contracts, a very old tool of law which may be traced back to Roman antiquity. In the first part, I introduce the notion of a contract with a suspensive condition, i.e. a contract whose efficacy is subordinated to a future uncertain event. As will be addressed in the second part, this kind of contracts is often linked to the fiction of the retroaction of (...)
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  9. In the Forbidden City. An Anthology of Erotic Fiction by Italian Women. Edited by Maria Rosa Cutrufelli. Translated by Vincent J. Bertolini. [REVIEW]D. Roman - 2003 - The European Legacy 8 (1):121-121.
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  10.  6
    Understanding appreciation among German, Italian and Spanish teenagers.María T. Soto-Sanfiel & Ariadna Angulo-Brunet - 2020 - Communications 45 (1):5-27.
    One of the psychological responses to audiovisual fictions that has been receiving more attention recently is appreciation, defined as a reflexive eudaimonic gratification obtained from a meaningful entertainment mode. Appreciation is the perception that the media experience has a profound meaning, has taught or revealed something. This study seeks to advance on the understanding of appreciation by youngsters. It translates and adapts the Oliver and Bartsch’s questionnaire for teenagers of three European countries. A total of 213 Italians, 55 Spaniards and (...)
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  11.  22
    Birth of a Fiction.Jean Ricardou & Erica Freiberg - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (2):221-230.
    Nothing, one day, seemed more imperative to me than the project of composing a book whose fiction would be constructed not as the representation of some preexistent entity, real or imaginary, but rather on the basis of certain specific mechanisms of generation and selection. The principle of selection may be called overdetermination. It requires that every element in the text have at least two justifications. In this perspective, each element is invested with a coefficient of overdetermination. If there is (...)
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  12.  7
    Surviving Melancholy and Mourning: a Queer Politics of Damage in Italian Literary. Representations of Same-sex Parenting.Charlotte Ross - 2020 - Phenomenology and Mind 19 (19):54.
    While family forms are ever more diverse, there are few critical analyses of the ways in which LGBTQ families have been represented in fiction. This article explores recent Italian novels by Cristiana Alicata, Melania Mazzucco and Chiara Francini that depict lesbian and gay parents and their children. In all these novels at least one gay or lesbian parent dies. Drawing on Judith Butler’s work on mourning and melancholia, I problematize the persistent spectre of grief and loss attached to (...)
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  13.  12
    Scintillant Cities: Glass Architecture, Finance Capital, and the Fictions of Macau’s Enclave Urbanism.Tim Simpson - 2013 - Theory, Culture and Society 30 (7-8):343-371.
    This article analyzes articulations among urban enclaves, finance capital, and glass architecture by exploring MGM’s corporate investments in the Las Vegas CityCenter development and the Chinese enclave of Macau. CityCenter is an unsuccessful $9 billion master-planned urban community financed by MGM and Dubai World. Macau is a former Portuguese colony and Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China which has, since its return to the PRC in 1999, replaced Las Vegas as the world’s most lucrative site of casino (...)
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  14.  26
    Between Plenitude and Responsibility: Notes on Ethics and Contemporary Literature.Eugenio Bolongaro - 2019 - Philosophia 47 (1):21-37.
    This article moves from the observation that one of the key characteristics of contemporary Italian fiction is a preoccupation with ethics and more specifically with the issues raised by the “ethical turn” in contemporary philosophy and theory. Current literary criticism, it is argued, has been slow to respond to the ethical dimension of these narratives whose innovative and important cultural contribution has yet to be fully appreciated. It is therefore necessary to develop a keener sensitivity to the ethical (...)
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  15.  7
    Economia, Diritto e Politica nella filosofia di Croce. Tra finzioni, istituzioni e libertà.Paolo Silvestri - 2012 - Torino: Giappichelli.
    Italian Abstract: Il testo propone una rilettura critica della filosofia di Croce, articolata attorno ai quei due snodi che la teoria degli «pseudoconcetti» mira a trattare unitariamente: il finzionale e l’istituzionale. Tentando di rinnovare il nominalismo e contro ogni ipostatizzazione metafisica, lo pseudoconcetto si incarica di rendere conto della logica dell’astratto e dell’‘empirico’: le leggi, i tipi, i modelli e gli schemi delle scienze sociali, ma anche le istituzioni e le leggi degli ordinamenti giuridici, politici ed economici. Donde la (...)
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  16.  2
    Tra avanguardia e integrazione: la narrativa italiana dopo il neorealismo.Luciano Cherchi & Renato Poggioli - 1977 - D'anna.
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  17.  16
    Indeterminacy and ritual symbol. Philosophical remarks on Ernesto De Martino’s The Land of Remorse.Sergio Fabio Berardini - 2014 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 75 (4):332-346.
    This article analyses the Italian philosopher and anthropologist Ernesto De Martino’s The Land of Remorse from a philosophical viewpoint. After having presented the main Demartinian concepts (e.g. ‘presence’ and ‘crisis of presence’) and examined the phenomenon of ‘tarantism’ (that is a magical-religious ritual practiced in southern Italy), the author interprets ‘ritual symbols’ as useful ‘fictions,’ which permit to resolve the problem of ‘indeterminacy’ (that refers to vague objects and unknown events), and rescue the human Self from psychological and existential (...)
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  18.  16
    Composition Discomposed.Jean Ricardou & Erica Freiberg - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 3 (1):79-91.
    On the fictional level, La Route des Flandres deploys a world in the process of complete disintegration. The manifestly privileged situation is the debacle of the French army in 1940 in which a number of the novel's protagonists are involved: George, the narrator; his cousin, Captain de Reixach; Iglésia, previously the Captain's jockey, now his orderly; Blum, Wack, and their horses. The havoc wrought by the military debacle can be subdivided into five categories. With the dissociation and decimation of the (...)
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  19.  3
    Composition Discomposed.Jean Ricardou - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 3 (1):79-91.
    On the fictional level, La Route des Flandres deploys a world in the process of complete disintegration. The manifestly privileged situation is the debacle of the French army in 1940 in which a number of the novel's protagonists are involved: George, the narrator; his cousin, Captain de Reixach; Iglésia, previously the Captain's jockey, now his orderly; Blum, Wack, and their horses. The havoc wrought by the military debacle can be subdivided into five categories. With the dissociation and decimation of the (...)
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  20.  8
    Nello scrittoio di Machiavelli: Il principe e la Ciropedia di Senofonte.Lucio Biasiori - 2017 - Roma: Carocci editore.
  21.  23
    Nietzsche among the Novelists.Theodore Ziolkowski - 2018 - Philosophy and Literature 42 (2):323-343.
    The Weimar Nietzsche-Bibliographie, which is available online along with an exhaustive index, contains hundreds of entries, ranging from "absolute Musik" to "Zynismus." But despite references to his treatment in film and to the names of several novelists, it provides no rubric for Friedrich Nietzsche in novels or otherwise as a fictional figure.Yet the twenty-first century alone has already produced at least four such works, in addition to two others over the preceding eighty years—not to mention films in Italian and (...)
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  22.  37
    Female Freedom and The Neapolitan Novels.Sam Shpall - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (4):676-701.
    This essay begins to develop a philosophical interpretation of Elena Ferrante's L'amica geniale, a work of fiction that is known in English as The Neapolitan Novels. My ultimate aim is to explore the work's ambitious moral psychology, and particularly its subtle conceptualization of women's path to freedom. I begin by reconstructing some of the main ideas of Italian difference feminism as they are expressed in the texts of the Milan Women's Bookstore Collective—texts that are controversial milestones of (...) social theory, yet are relatively unknown outside of Italy. I then show how these ideas provide a useful frame of reference for interpreters of Ferrante's novel. This discussion sets up a more extended analysis of the special status of Lila Cerullo, her strange condition of smarginatura, and the import of her puzzling earthquake speech. (shrink)
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  23.  17
    ""The Power of" Pliant Stuff": Fables and Frankness in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Republicanism.Arthur Weststeijn - 2011 - Journal of the History of Ideas 72 (1):1-27.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Power of “Pliant Stuff”: Fables and Frankness in Seventeenth-Century Dutch RepublicanismArthur WeststeijnIn the preface to his 1609 collection of classical fables entitled De sapientia veterum (On the Wisdom of the Ancients), Francis Bacon vindicated his choice for such a playful genre. Although the writing of fables might seem just an “exercise of pleasure for my own or my reader’s recreation,” Bacon stressed that that was not the case. (...)
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  24.  7
    Cool Memories Ii, 1987-1990.Jean Baudrillard - 1996 - Duke University Press.
    Jean Baudrillard is widely recognized as one of the most important and provocative writers of our age. Variously termed “France’s leading philosopher of postmodernism” and “a sharp-shooting Lone Ranger of the post-Marxist left,” he might also be called our leading philosopher of seduction or of mass culture. Following his acclaimed _America_ and _Cool Memories_, this book is the third in a series of personal records in hyperreality. Idiosyncratic, outrageous, and brilliantly original, Baudrillard here casts his net widely and combines autobiographical (...)
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  25. On japanese things and words: An answer to Heidegger's question.Michael F. Marra - 2004 - Philosophy East and West 54 (4):555-568.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:On Japanese Things and Words:An Answer to Heidegger's QuestionMichael F. MarraIt has been over thirty years since my high school teacher of philosophy, Professor Dino Dezzani, recommended a book from which to begin my study of philosophy: Martin Heidegger's (1889-1976) Unterwegs zur Sprache (On the way to language [1959]). Evidently he was aware of my interest in literature and thought that Heidegger's discussion of words, things, and poetic language (...)
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  26.  13
    Transforming Images: How Photography Complicates the Picture.Aphrodite Désirée Navab - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (2):114-121.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.2 (2003) 114-121 [Access article in PDF] TRANSFORMING IMAGES: HOW PHOTOGRAPHY COMPLICATES THE PICTURE, by Barbara E. Savedoff. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2000, 233 pp., $35.00 hardcover. The very title of Barbara Savedoff's book invites us on a journey into photography's multiple roles. Photographic images transform their subjects at the same time that they themselves are the results of transformations. They also (...)
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  27.  19
    De Angelis difusor de Vico: examen de un paradigma indiciario.José I. Sazbón - 1993 - Cuadernos Sobre Vico 3:157.
    El autor trata de determinar si la recepción de G. Vico en el contexto de la cultura rioplatense decimonónica se debió directamente a De Angelis o Michelet, aparentemente influido a su vez por De Angelis. Si la primera idea es plausible, dada la estancia del mismo italiano en la Argentina, entonces la conclusión parece clara: el verdadero papel de De Angelis en la difusión decimonónica de Vico no es un hecho, sino algo desconocido. Sin embargo, el hecho de que algo (...)
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  28. Do Trade Union Leaders Violate Subjective Expected Utility? Some Insights From Experimental Data.Anna Maffioletti & Michele Santoni - 2005 - Theory and Decision 59 (3):207-253.
    This paper presents the results of two experiments designed to test violations of Subjective Expected Utility Theory (SEUT) within a sample of Italian trade union delegates and leaders. Subjects priced risky and ambiguous prospects in the domain of gains. Risky prospects were based on games of chance, while ambiguous prospects were built on the standard Ellsberg paradox and on event lotteries whose outcomes were based either on the results of a fictional election or on the future results of the (...)
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  29.  14
    The Symbol Gives Rise to Thought: Writings on Art by Marina Warner.Vivian Rehberg - 2012 - Violette Editions. Edited by Marina Warner.
    This collection brings together a selection of writings on art by the internationally acclaimed novelist, historian and critic Marina Warner. For 30 years Warner has published widely on a range of art-world subjects and objects, from contemporary installation and film works to paintings by Flemish and Italian Renaissance masters, through Victorian photography and twentieth-century political drawings and prints. Warner's extraordinary curiosity in art and culture is conveyed in writing that is at once poetic and playful, elegant and rigorous, training (...)
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  30.  7
    Cool Memories Ii, 1987-1990.Chris Turner (ed.) - 1990 - Duke University Press.
    Jean Baudrillard is widely recognized as one of the most important and provocative writers of our age. Variously termed “France’s leading philosopher of postmodernism” and “a sharp-shooting Lone Ranger of the post-Marxist left,” he might also be called our leading philosopher of seduction or of mass culture. Following his acclaimed _America_ and _Cool Memories_, this book is the third in a series of personal records in hyperreality. Idiosyncratic, outrageous, and brilliantly original, Baudrillard here casts his net widely and combines autobiographical (...)
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  31.  34
    Cervantes in Italy: Christian Humanism and the Visual Impact of Renaissance Rome.Fernando Cervantes - 2005 - Journal of the History of Ideas 66 (3):325-350.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Cervantes in Italy:Christian Humanism and the Visual Impact of Renaissance RomeFernando CervantesToward the end of 1569, shortly after his twenty-second birthday, Miguel de Cervantes arrived in Rome to serve as chamberlain to the young monsignor Giulio de Acquaviva, soon to be made a cardinal by Pope Pius V.1 The event marked the beginning of a six-year sojourn about which surprisingly little is known with certainty. From scattered semiautobiographical references (...)
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  32.  15
    Quando la fantascienza è donna by Eleonora Federici.Vita Fortunati - 2019 - Utopian Studies 30 (3):532-535.
    Quando la fantascienza è donna by Eleonora Federici is a book of many merits: its theoretical framework is informed by recent perspectives from gender studies, it boasts an extensive bibliography, and it is written in captivating and accessible prose. It is an intelligent book that fills an important gap in the literature, as few works on women science fiction writers have been published in Italian. Indeed, while much has been written on women’s science fiction in the English (...)
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  33.  38
    Against the Fantasts.J. L. H. Thomas - 1991 - Philosophy 66 (257):349-367.
    Amongst Kant's lesser known early writings is a short treatise with the curious title Dreams of a Spirit-Seer Explained by Dreams of Metaphysics, in which, with considerable acumen and brilliance, and not a little irony, Kant exposes the empty pretensions of his contemporary, the Swedish visionary and Biblical exegete, Emanuel Swedenborg, to have access to a spirit world, denied other mortals. Despite his efforts, it must be feared, however, that Kant did not, alas, succeed in laying the spirit of Swedenborg (...)
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  34.  14
    Historians and storytellers.Keith Thomas - 2014 - Common Knowledge 20 (1):9-10.
    This guest column comprises both a review of the English translation of Carlo Ginzburg's book Threads and Traces: True False Fictive and some general comments on the merits and demerits of microhistory as a genre poised between historical writing and fiction. The column is published in the context of two others regarding this latter topic — one by Natalie Zemon Davis, the author of the microhistorical classic The Return of Martin Guerre, and one by Colin Richmond. Davis's column is (...)
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  35.  11
    Historians and Storytellers.Keith Thomas - 2019 - Common Knowledge 25 (1-3):163-164.
    This guest column comprises both a review of the English translation of Carlo Ginzburg’s book Threads and Traces: True False Fictive and some general comments on the merits and demerits of microhistory as a genre poised between historical writing and fiction. The column is published in the context of two others regarding this latter topic — one by Natalie Zemon Davis, the author of the microhistorical classic The Return of Martin Guerre, and one by Colin Rich-mond. Davis’s column is (...)
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  36.  7
    Saggi di teoria della letteratura: percorsi tematici.Enza Biagini - 2016 - Firenze, Italy: Firenze University Press.
    In this book Saggi sulla teoria della letteratura ("Essays on the Theory of Literature") Enza Biagini puts in play her rich theoretical background and a vast knowledge of texts and authors to deal with some fundamental problems concerning literature, its status, its metamorphoses and its being necessary. Following modern paths, she leads the readers on the traces of different genres and situations difficult to define (the essay-writing, the unfinished...), of 'temporary' themes always on the point of becoming something else (the (...)
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  37.  11
    Proust: A Retrospective Reading.Jean Ricardou & Erica Freiberg - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (3):531-541.
    Deliberately employing rather vague terms, let us postulate a literature of the past and a literature of today.Two very simple ways of bringing them into relation are conceivable. One might adopt a prospective attitude, which would consider today's literature in the light of the past's. Or one might adopt a retrospective attitude, which would consider the literature of the past in the light of today's. The two positions are not equivalent. The prospective attitude is threatened with sterility: it may well (...)
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  38.  10
    Ayn Rand, Fascism, and Dystopia.Luca Moratal Roméu - 2023 - Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 23 (1-2):350-356.
    ABSTRACT This article reviews the book Ayn Rand e il fascismo eterno. Una narrazione distopica, by Diana Thermes. This is the first Italian book specifically devoted to Rand’s thought and novels. Thermes has conducted her study in a remarkably original way, profusely interrelating Rand’s fiction works with the long-standing tradition of dystopian literature and her analysis of collectivism with the most significant contributions on the nature and causes of totalitarianism, as well as illustrating the relevance of Rand’s ideas (...)
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  39.  13
    Accomplishing Intergroup Relations in Group Homes: A Discursive Analysis of Professionals Talking About External and Internal Stakeholders.Marzia Saglietti & Filomena Marino - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Focusing on one of the most studied dimensions of Social Psychology, i.e., intergroup relations, this study analyzes its discursive accomplishment in a specific group-based intervention, i.e., the talk and work of an Italian group home, i.e., a small alternative care facility hosting a group of out-of-home children. Particularly, we focused on the fictionally called “Nuns’ Home,” a group home previously investigated for its ethnocentric bias, and its intergroup relations with “inside” and “outside” groups, such as schools, biological families, and (...)
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  40.  3
    It Was the Best of Times, It Was the Worst of Times.Erika Bianchi - 2020 - Logos 30 (3):26-32.
    This essay is based on a talk the author gave at the By the Book conference in Florence in June 2019. It examines the power dynamics in the Italian publishing world from the perspective of a fiction writer. Writing and publishing are two completely different worlds that can be differently approached. What’s the point of writing? Should writers write about what they know, or about what they do not know? Can publishing be put off? What’s the role of (...)
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  41.  9
    Book Review: The French Tradition and the Literature of Medieval England. [REVIEW]Edward E. Foster - 1995 - Philosophy and Literature 19 (2):400-401.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The French Tradition and the Literature of Medieval EnglandEdward E. FosterThe French Tradition and the Literature of Medieval England, by William Calin; xvi & 587pp. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1994, $75.00 cloth, $29.95 paper.Probably not many people will read all of this book, because it is very long. That is too bad, because it is also very good and its length is necessary for its double purpose: (...)
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  42.  3
    Narrative Ethics.Jeremy Hawthorn (ed.) - 2013 - Amsterdam: Editions Rodopi.
    While Plato recommended expelling poets from the ideal society, W. H. Auden famously declared that poetry makes nothing happen. The 19 contributions to the present book avoid such polarized views and, responding in different ways to the “ethical turn” in narrative theory, explore the varied ways in which narratives encourage readers to ponder matters of right and wrong. All work from the premise that the analysis of narrative ethics needs to be linked to a sensitivity to esthetic form. The ethical (...)
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  43.  16
    Narrative Ethics.Jakob Lothe (ed.) - 2013 - Amsterdam: Editions Rodopi.
    While Plato recommended expelling poets from the ideal society, W. H. Auden famously declared that poetry makes nothing happen. The 19 contributions to the present book avoid such polarized views and, responding in different ways to the “ethical turn” in narrative theory, explore the varied ways in which narratives encourage readers to ponder matters of right and wrong. All work from the premise that the analysis of narrative ethics needs to be linked to a sensitivity to esthetic form. The ethical (...)
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  44.  1
    Machiavelli: a renaissance life.Joseph Markulin - 2013 - Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books.
    This epic piece of storytelling brings the world of fifteenth-century Italy to life as it traces Machiavelli's rise from young boy to controversial political thinker. The often-vilified Renaissance politico and author of The Prince comes to life as a diabolically clever, yet mild mannered and conscientious civil servant. Author Joseph Markulin presents Machiavelli's life as a true adventure story, replete with violence, treachery, heroism, betrayal, sex, bad popes, noble outlaws, deformed kings, menacing Turks, even more menacing Lutherans, unscrupulous astrologers, untrustworthy (...)
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  45. Dario Martinelli.T. V. Italian - 2006 - In Erkki Pekkilä, David Neumeyer & Richard Littlefield (eds.), Music, Meaning and Media. University of Helsinki. pp. 25--94.
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  46.  5
    Mlchela menghini.Italian-English Correspondences - 2008 - In V. K. Bhatia, Christopher Candlin & Paola Evangelisti Allori (eds.), Language, culture and the law: the formulation of legal concepts across systems and cultures. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 64--99.
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  47. Darwin and George Eliot: Plotting and organicism.Nineteenth-Century Fiction - forthcoming - History of Science.
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  48. John Woods.Fortress Fiction - 1996 - In Calin Andrei Mihailescu & Walid Hamarneh (eds.), Fiction updated: theories of fictionality, narratology, and poetics. Buffalo: University of Toronto Press. pp. 39.
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  49. Mother-infant bonding.A. Scientific Fiction - 1994 - Human Nature 5 (1):69.
     
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  50. Nicholas Rescher.Who Invented Fiction - 1996 - In Calin Andrei Mihailescu & Walid Hamarneh (eds.), Fiction updated: theories of fictionality, narratology, and poetics. Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
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