upload/alexandrina/6. Middle Ages Series/Fordham Series in Medieval Studies (15 Books) [Complete]/Teodolinda Barolini, H. Wayne Storey - Dante for the New Millennium (Fordham Series in Medieval Studies) [Retail].pdf
Dante For the New Millennium (Fordham Series in Medieval Studies) 🔍
Teodolinda Barolini (editor), H. Wayne Storey (editor)
Fordham University Press, Fordham series in medieval studies,, no. 2, 1st ed., New York, New York State, 2003
English [en] · PDF · 3.4MB · 2003 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/upload · Save
description
the Twenty-five Original Essays In This Remarkable Book Constitute Both A State Of The Art Survey Of Dante Scholarship And A Manifesto For New Understandings Of One Of The World's Great Poets. The Fruit Of An Historic Conference Called By The Dante Society Of America, The Essays Confront A Range Of Important Questions. What Theories, Methods, And Issues Are Unique To Dante Scholarship? How Are They Changing? What Is The Essence Of The Distinctive American Dante Tradition? Why—and How—do We Read Dante In Today's Global, Postmodern Culture? From John Ahern On The First Copies Of The Commedia To Peter Hawkins And Rachel Jacoff On Dante After Modernism, The Essays Shed Brilliant New Light On Dante's Texts, His World, And What We Make Of His Legacy. The Contributors: John Ahern, H. Wayne Storey, Guglielmo Gorni, Teodolinda Barolini, Gary P. Cestaro, Lino Pertile, F. Regina Psaki, Steven Botterill, Giuseppe Mazzotta, Alison Cornish, Robert M. Durling, Manuele Gragnolati, Giuliana Carugati, Susan Noakes, Zygmunt Baranski, Christopher Kleinhenz, Ronald L. Martinez, Ronald Herzman, Amilcare Iannucci, Albert Russell Ascoli, Michelangelo Picone, Jessica Levenstein, David Foster Wallace, Piero Boitani, Peter Hawkins, And Rachel Jacoff.
Alternative filename
nexusstc/Dante For the New Millennium (Fordham Series in Medieval Studies)/97a43dbd93e4776e4af75b481fdecc93.pdf
Alternative filename
lgli/Dante for the New Millennium - Barolini, Teodolinda;Storey, Wayy of America.;Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America.;.pdf
Alternative filename
lgrsnf/Dante for the New Millennium - Barolini, Teodolinda;Storey, Wayy of America.;Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America.;.pdf
Alternative title
Dante for the new millennium : [... Conference "Dante2000" ... held at Columbia University on April 7-9, 2000
Alternative title
Barolini.pdf
Alternative author
Barolini, Teodolinda;Storey, Wayne.;Dante Society of America.;Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America.;
Alternative author
Barolini, Teodolinda; Storey, Wayne; Dante Society of America; Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America
Alternative author
Teodolinda Barolini; Wayne Storey; Dante Society of America; Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America
Alternative author
Teodolinda Barolini; Conference Dante <2000, New York, NY>; American Assembly
Alternative author
edited by Teodolinda Barolini and H. Wayne Storey
Alternative publisher
Oxford University Press USA
Alternative edition
Oxford University Press USA, New York, 2003
Alternative edition
United States, United States of America
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Acrobat Distiller 5.0.5 (Windows)
Acrobat Distiller 5.0.5 (Windows)
metadata comments
{"edition":"1","isbns":["0823222713","9780823222711"],"last_page":498,"publisher":"Fordham University Press","source":"libgen_rs"}
metadata comments
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Proceedings of "Dante2000," sponsored by the Dante Society of America and the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America, held at Columbia University on Apr. 7-9, 2000.
Proceedings of "Dante2000," sponsored by the Dante Society of America and the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America, held at Columbia University on Apr. 7-9, 2000.
Alternative description
Contents 6
Introduction 10
Notes for an Introduction 20
Abbreviations 26
I: PHILOLOGIES 28
1. What Did the First Copies of the Comedy Look Like? 30
2. Early Editorial Forms of Dante’s Lyrics 45
3. Material Philology, Conjectural Philology, Philology without Adjectives 73
Philologies: Works Cited 85
II: APPETITES 92
4. Beyond (Courtly) Dualism: Thinking about Gender in Dante’s Lyrics 94
5. Queering Nature, Queering Gender: Dante and Sodomy 119
6. Does the Stilnovo Go to Heaven? 133
7. Love for Beatrice: Transcending Contradiction in the Paradiso 144
Appetites: Works Cited 160
III: PHILOSOPHIES 170
8. Mysticism and Meaning in Dante’s Paradiso 172
9. The Heaven of the Sun: Dante between Aquinas and Bonaventure 181
10. Vulgarizing Science: Vernacular Translation of Natural Philosophy 198
11. The Body and the Flesh in the Purgatorio 212
12. From Plurality to (Near) Unicity of Forms: Embryology in Purgatorio 25 221
13. Quando amor fa sentir de la sua pace 240
Philosophies: Works Cited 257
IV: RECEPTION 268
14. Virility, Nobility, and Banking: The Crossing of Discourses in the Tenzone with Forese 270
15. Scatology and Obscenity in Dante 288
16. On Dante and the Visual Arts 303
Reception: Works Cited 322
V: HISTORIES 328
17. Dante’s Jeremiads: The Fall of Jerusalem and the Burden of the New Pharisees, the Capetians, and Florence 330
18. From Francis to Solomon: Eschatology in the Sun 349
19. Already and Not Yet: Dante’s Existential Eschatology 363
20. Dante after Dante 378
Histories: Works Cited 398
VI: REWRITINGS 416
21. Ovid and the Exul Inmeritus 418
22. The Re-Formation of Marsyas in Paradiso 1 437
23. Dante in England 451
24. Moby-Dante? 464
25. Still Here: Dante after Modernism 480
Rewritings: Works Cited 494
Notes on Contributors 503
Index 508
A 508
B 509
C 510
D 513
E 514
F 514
G 515
H 516
I 517
J 517
K 518
L 518
M 519
N 520
O 520
P 521
Q 523
R 523
S 524
T 526
U 526
V 526
W 527
Y 527
Introduction 10
Notes for an Introduction 20
Abbreviations 26
I: PHILOLOGIES 28
1. What Did the First Copies of the Comedy Look Like? 30
2. Early Editorial Forms of Dante’s Lyrics 45
3. Material Philology, Conjectural Philology, Philology without Adjectives 73
Philologies: Works Cited 85
II: APPETITES 92
4. Beyond (Courtly) Dualism: Thinking about Gender in Dante’s Lyrics 94
5. Queering Nature, Queering Gender: Dante and Sodomy 119
6. Does the Stilnovo Go to Heaven? 133
7. Love for Beatrice: Transcending Contradiction in the Paradiso 144
Appetites: Works Cited 160
III: PHILOSOPHIES 170
8. Mysticism and Meaning in Dante’s Paradiso 172
9. The Heaven of the Sun: Dante between Aquinas and Bonaventure 181
10. Vulgarizing Science: Vernacular Translation of Natural Philosophy 198
11. The Body and the Flesh in the Purgatorio 212
12. From Plurality to (Near) Unicity of Forms: Embryology in Purgatorio 25 221
13. Quando amor fa sentir de la sua pace 240
Philosophies: Works Cited 257
IV: RECEPTION 268
14. Virility, Nobility, and Banking: The Crossing of Discourses in the Tenzone with Forese 270
15. Scatology and Obscenity in Dante 288
16. On Dante and the Visual Arts 303
Reception: Works Cited 322
V: HISTORIES 328
17. Dante’s Jeremiads: The Fall of Jerusalem and the Burden of the New Pharisees, the Capetians, and Florence 330
18. From Francis to Solomon: Eschatology in the Sun 349
19. Already and Not Yet: Dante’s Existential Eschatology 363
20. Dante after Dante 378
Histories: Works Cited 398
VI: REWRITINGS 416
21. Ovid and the Exul Inmeritus 418
22. The Re-Formation of Marsyas in Paradiso 1 437
23. Dante in England 451
24. Moby-Dante? 464
25. Still Here: Dante after Modernism 480
Rewritings: Works Cited 494
Notes on Contributors 503
Index 508
A 508
B 509
C 510
D 513
E 514
F 514
G 515
H 516
I 517
J 517
K 518
L 518
M 519
N 520
O 520
P 521
Q 523
R 523
S 524
T 526
U 526
V 526
W 527
Y 527
Alternative description
Proceedings of'Dante2000,'sponsored by the Dante Society of America and the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America, held at Columbia University on Apr. 7-9, 2000.
date open sourced
2024-01-10
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