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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Die Opernlibretti nach Dramen Gabriele d'Annunzios /

Roth, Olaf, January 1999 (has links)
Diss.--Düsseldorf, 1998. / Bibliogr. p. 201-211.
2

Gabriele d'Annunzio in der deutschen Literatur /

Anderhub, Annemarie. January 1948 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss. Phil. I Bern, 1947.
3

The influence of English Pre-Raphaelitism on 19th-century Italian art and literature

Pieri, Giuliana January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
4

COLOR LOCALE NELLA NELLA NARRATIVA REGIONALE ITALIANA DEL SECONDO OTTOCENTO

BAITA, BRUNELLA 25 February 2016 (has links)
Il presente lavoro si propone di iniziare a configurare un quadro unitario e sistematico della narrativa postverghiana sia sul piano letterario sia sul piano linguistico <<per la connotazione ambivalente del verismo come scrittura artistica in cui ricerca tematica e stilistica si condizionano in un rapporto inestricabile>>. Alla ricerca delle tracce di un vero o presunto “color locale” si sono scandagliate oltre centocinquanta novelle (Nicola Misasi, “In magna Sila”; Salvatore Di Giacomo, “Novelle Napolitane”; Matilde Serao, “Dal vero”; Domenico Ciampoli, “Trecce nere”; Gabriele D'Annunzio, “Terra vergine”; Mario Pratesi, “In Provincia”; Emilio De Marchi, “Sotto gli alberi”; Remigio Zena, “Le anime semplici. Storie umili”) la cui lingua è stata misurata sia rispetto agli strumenti normativi coevi sia rispetto all’uso corrente, ricostruito attraverso i lavori di studiosi che hanno focalizzato la loro attenzione su aspetti diversi dell’italiano del XIX secolo: dalla lingua letteraria a quella giornalistica passando attraverso l’ambito colloquiale/famigliare che emerge dallo studio degli epistolari. L'introduzione letteraria che precede il quadro appena descritto propone un'analisi comparativa dei tratti caratterizzanti il verismo verghiano secondo la declinazione che ne offrono, nelle varie raccolte prese in analisi, gli autori coinvolti in questo studio. / Our work aims at building a unitary, systematic tableau of the Italian narrative after Verga. We have focused on literary and language aspects <<because of the double feature of Verismo as an artistic writing where the research of theme and style influence each other in a tangled relationship>>. Tracing a real or presumed 'local color', we have examined over one hundred and fifty short stories ( 'In magna Sila' by Nicola Misasi; 'Novelle Napolitane' by Salvatore Di Giacomo; 'Dal vero' by Matilde Serao; 'Trecce nere' by Domenico Ciampoli; 'Terra vergine' by Gabriele D'Annunzio; 'In Provincia' by Mario Pratesi; 'Sotto gli alberi' by Emilio De Marchi; 'Le anime semplici. Storie umili' by Remigio Zena). The language has been studied based on norms and everyday usage of those times. The latter has been shaped through the works of scholars who have analyzed different aspects of the Italian language from the 19th century, in literature, journalism, and also in more colloquial, familiar letters. The section about literature preceding the portrait pictured above offers a comparative survey of the specific traits of Verga's Verismo according to the variations made, in the already mentioned collections of short stories, by the authors involved in this research.
5

Parisina: Literary and Historical Perspectives Across Six Centuries

Evans, John Scoville 22 May 2014 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis explores the relationship between the many literary texts referring to the deaths of Ugo d'Este and Parisina Malatesta, who were executed in Ferrara in 1425 in accordance with an order by Niccolò III d'Este after he discovered their incestuous relationship. The texts are divided in three categories: (1) the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Italian novellas and their translations; (2) the seventeenth-century Spanish tragedy; and (3) the nineteenth- and twentieth-century Romantic works. Although these categories divide the various texts chronologically, they also represent a thematic grouping as the texts within each category share common themes that set them apart from those in the other groups. While the various texts all tell the same story, each approaches the tragedy slightly differently based largely on the audience for which it was intended. Thus, the time and place of each text greatly affects its telling. Still, the fact that substantial differences exist between texts that were produced in both geographic and temporal proximity suggests that these are not all-determining factors. Although scholarship exists analyzing individual texts, a comprehensive study of the literary accounts relating to the tragedy has never been undertaken. Rather than detracting from the story, the differences put forth in each of the literary texts enrich the global reading experience by offering many perspectives on the tragedy. In addition, these differences influence how the reader reacts to each of the other texts. Familiarity with one version of the story changes the way a reader approaches the others. A parallel reading of the different versions of the story also shows the power culture has on interpretation. Texts referring to a singular event from one time and place sharply contrast with those that are the product of other circumstances.

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