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Per difetto reintegrare una lettura del Filocolo di Giovanni Boccaccio /Morosini, Roberta. January 1900 (has links)
Initialement th. de doct. (McGill University, 1998). / Bibliogr. p. 193-206. Index.
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The trial of Hugues Geraud : city, church and papacy at the turn of the fourteenth centuryGroom, Veronica J. January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Le novelle del Decameron nel commento dei novellatori /Colantonio, Joseph Costanzo. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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The parabola of pleasure : a study of the cornice of the DecameronMuto, Lisa M. January 1991 (has links)
In this dissertation I examine the narrative parts of the so-called cornice of the Decameron. The core of my interpretation is to be found in Chapter I where I show that the frame story--the novella portante, as it has been called--with its "parabolic" rather than "rectilinear" progression is intended to illustrate the brigade's pursuit of pleasure, without any ulterior motive such as, for instance, the restructuring of the decaying Florentine society. A careful study of the members of the brigade (Chapter II) and of their songs (Chapter III) obviously forms an integral part of any analysis of the frame story. The Appendix deals with the illustrations of the cornice: the rich iconographic tradition of the Decameron, at least before this century, appears to have accorded more significance to the frame story than has literary criticism.
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The parabola of pleasure : a study of the cornice of the DecameronMuto, Lisa M. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Le novelle del Decameron nel commento dei novellatori /Colantonio, Joseph Costanzo. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Der Renner des Hugo von Trimberg : Uberlieferung, Quellenabhängigkeit und Struktur einer spätmittelalterlichen Lehrdichtung /Weigand, Rudolf Kilian January 2000 (has links)
Texte remanié de : Habilitationsschrift : Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaftliche Fakultät : Eichstätt, Katholische Universität : 1995. / Bibliogr. p. [385]-393. Index.
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"Florio und Bianceffora" (1499) Studien zu einer literarischen Übersetzung /Schünemann, Silke. January 2005 (has links)
Edition commerciale de : Dissertation : Philosophische Fakultät : Göttingen, Universität : 2003. / Bibliogr. p. [319]-331.
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Boccaccio and romanceZaldivar, Molly Mezzetti 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Per "difetto rintegrare";. : una lettura del Filocolo di Giovanni BoccaccioMorosini, Roberta. January 1998 (has links)
In this study I attempt to provide a critical-exegetic reading of Giovanni Boccaccio's Filocolo: critical, because my point of departure is a problem---the insistent, puzzling repetition, on the part of the various characters, of the same story, the story of Florio and Biancifiore; exegetic, because my purpose is to arrive at a global interpretation of the work. / It is my contention that, first, every version of the story appears to be dictated by the purpose of informing the 'ignorant'---namely those unaware of how events truly unfolded---in order to complete a narrative that, from beginning to end "interamente si contenga;" second, that this repetition ensures the unity of the work as a whole. Moreover, the gradual process leading to full information runs parallel, I believe, to the gradual process of Florio's coming of age, from his fallacious "imagining" to his acquisition of "real knowledge." With my interpretation I wish to shed light on one aspect of Boccaccio's poetics, that is, the way he opposes his full, well-founded and consistent account to the "fabulosi parlari degli ignoranti." / On a quite different level, the repetition of the same story can be linked to Boccaccio's penchant for experimenting with the art of storytelling. / I have followed throughout the text of the Filocolo leaving aside, however, Book I, which concerns the parents of the two lovers and is essentially just a premise to the story. The division of my dissertation in four chapters reflects the two distinct phases that, in my opinion, characterize the narration: the 'outward journey' (Chapters I--III) and the 'return journey' (Chapter IV). In Chapter II I deal with the much discussed episode of the Questioni d'amore, that takes place in Naples during a pause in the outward journey. In the Appendix I analyze the phenomenology of death, both actual and 'verbal,' which allows me to explore further the character and personality of Florio and Biancifiore.
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