Showing results for "adele bardazzi"
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 Results
Adult content is visible.
Conglomerates
Andrea Zanzotto’s Poetic Clusters
2025
EN
Within twentieth-century poetry, Andrea Zanzotto’s work showcases intellectual rigour and stylistic innovation. This book explores his poetry’s legacy throughout all his poetic works, unveiling fresh insights across, although not limited to, lyric theory, environmental humanities, cinema studies andanthropology.
$122.69 CAD
Eugenio Montale
A Poetics of Mourning
2023
EN
«Deeply versed in recent theoretical discussions of the lyric form in general and the elegy in particular, Adele Bardazzi also brings to bear queer thinking on temporality and philosophical treatments of mourning to shift the understanding of Montale’s verse, contesting the division between an early lyrical phase and a later ironic phase. A rich combination of sensitive readings and critical reflection.»(Jonathan Culler, Cornell University, Author of Theory of the Lyric)
$73.79 CAD
2020
EN
This edited collection investigates the relationship between gender and authority across geographical contexts, periods and fields.Who is recognized as a legitimate voice in debate and decision-making, and how is that legitimization produced? Through a variety of methodological approaches, the chapters address some of the most pressing and controversial themes under scrutiny in current feminist scholarship and activism, such as pornography, political representation, LGBTI struggles...
$116.09 CAD
Transmissions of Memory
Echoes, Traumas, and Nostalgia in Post–World War II Italian Culture
2018
EN
Transmissions of Memory: Echoes, Traumas and Nostalgia in Post-World War II Italian Culture discusses cultural products—films, poetry, fiction, architectural buildings, autobiographical writing, and social media—to individuate through them the dynamics of memory. The field of analysis is Italian culture from World War II to the contemporary times, and the volume has in a gendered approach one of its focuses, offering an encompassing view on cultural memory and highlighting the similarities...
$136.79 CAD
People who read this also enjoyed
2022
EN
Accessible
Luminous essays on translation and self-translation by an award-winning writer and literary translatorTranslating Myself and Others is a collection of candid and disarmingly personal essays by Pulitzer Prize–winning author Jhumpa Lahiri, who reflects on her emerging identity as a translator as well as a writer in two languages.With subtlety and emotional immediacy, Lahiri draws on Ovid’s myth of Echo and Narcissus to explore the distinction between...
Singing Games in Early Modern Italy
The Music Books of Orazio Vecchi
2015
EN
In Italy during the late cinquecento, printed music could be found not only in the homes of the wealthy or the music professional, but also in lay homes, courts, and academies. No longer confined to the salons of the elite, music took on the role of social play and recreation. Paul Schleuse examines these new musical forms through a study of the music books of Italian priest, poet, and composer, Orazio Vecchi. Composed for minor patrons and the wider music-buying public, Vecchi's madrigals...
$17.59 CAD
or Free with Kobo PlusThe History of Futurism
The Precursors, Protagonists, and Legacies
2012
EN
Futurism began as an artistic and social movement in early twentieth-century Italy. Until now, much of the scholarship available in English has focused only on a single individual or art form. This volume seeks to present a more complete picture of the movement by exploring the history of the movement, the events leading up to the movement, and the lasting impact it has had as well as the individuals involved in it.The History of Futurism: The Precursors, Protagonists, and Legacies ...
$78.89 CAD
Pasolini
The Sacred Flesh
- Series -
- Toronto Italian Studies
2015
EN
Poet, novelist, dramatist, polemicist, and filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini continues to be one of the most influential intellectuals of post-war Italy. In Pasolini: The Sacred Flesh, Stefania Benini examines his corporeal vision of the sacred, focusing on his immanent interpretation of the Christian doctrine of the Incarnation and the “sacred flesh” of Christ in both Passion and Death as the subproletarian flesh of the outcast at the margins of capitalism.By investigating th...
$64.79 CAD
- Series -
- International Crime Fictions
2011
EN
Iberian Crime Fiction is the first volume in English to provide an extensive overview of crime fiction in Spain and Portugal. While the origins of peninsular crime fiction are traced in Nancy Vosburg's introductory chapter to the volume, the essays focus on specific topics that provide readers with a sense of the development of the genre in the second half of the 20th-century and current trends in the 21st-century. Patty Hart, whose The Spanish Sleuth introduced English-speaking readers to...
$21.19 CAD
or Free with Kobo PlusFolklore by the Fireside
Text and Context of the Tuscan Veglia
2014
EN
For centuries, social life in rural Tuscany has centered around the veglia, an evening gathering of family and friends at the hearth. Folklore by the Fireside is a thorough and insightful study of this custom—from the tales, riddles, lullabies, and folk prayers performed as the small children are put to bed to the courtship songs and dances later in the evening to the anti-veglia male gossip, card games, and protest songs originating in the tavern.Alessandro Falas...
$37.59 CAD
The Drama of the Assimilated Jew
Giorgio Bassani's Romanzo di Ferrara
- Series -
- Toronto Italian Studies
2014
EN
Giorgio Bassani (1916–2000) was a Jewish Italian novelist, poet, essayist, editor, and intellectual. A cosmopolitan writer concerned with the problems of Jewish identity and history, Bassani was deeply affected by the persecution and deportation of Italian Jews under Mussolini. His personal experience of this period and its aftermath was fundamental to the creation of his masterwork, the Romanzo di Ferrara (Romance of Ferrara).In The Drama of the Assimilated J...
$72.79 CAD
Decadent Genealogies
The Rhetoric of Sickness from Baudelaire to D'Annunzio
2018
EN
Barbara Spackman here examines the ways in which decadent writers adopted the language of physiological illness and alteration as a figure for psychic otherness. By means of an ideological and rhetorical analysis of scientific as well as literary texts, she shows how the rhetoric of sickness provided the male decadent writer with an alibi for the occupation and appropriation of the female body.











