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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

L' onore, la patria e la fede nell'ultimo Marinetti /

Reitano, Antonino. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis. / Contains bibliography of works by and on Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (1876- 1944), bibliographical references and notes.
2

Le metafore nei manifesti futuristi del Marinetti /

Adib Amante, Laura. January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
3

Le metafore nei manifesti futuristi del Marinetti /

Adib Amante, Laura January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
4

Italian futurism as a sociolinguistic phenomenon

Gisuti, Franco. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1981. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 188-193).
5

Inszenierte Männerträume : eine Untersuchung zur politischen Selbstinszenierung der italienischen Schriftsteller Gabriele D'Annunzio und Filippo Tommaso Marinetti in der Zeit zwischen Fin-de-Siècle und Faschismus /

Chytraeus-Auerbach, Irene, January 1900 (has links)
Diss.--Marburg--Universität, 2001. / Bibliogr. p. 318-329.
6

Words like fire : prophecy, apocalypse, and the avant-garde in Apollinaire, Marinetti, and Pound

Leveque, James Patrick January 2015 (has links)
The early twentieth-century avant-garde has cast a long shadow over the popular imagination as producers of manifestos, public scandals, and some of the most enduring art and literature of the last century. In this study, I examine the works of three poets who are not only considered leading avant-gardists, but who are foundational to how both popular consciousness and academic scholarship have understood the avant-garde’s theory and practice: Guillaume Apollinaire, F. T. Marinetti, and Ezra Pound. In particular, this study focuses on the recurring themes of prophecy and apocalypse in their work. These themes occur through reference to prophetic and apocalyptic literary or mythical figures, but also through stylistic innovations such as the use of literary personae or the attempt to synthesise diverse artistic forms. Focusing on these themes allows this study to re-engage the question of how these poets, and the avant-garde more broadly, regarded their practice as a social act. Using a comparative methodology in this thesis, prophecy is viewed not simply as a declamatory literary style that foretells the future, but as a particular kind of social relationship to an audience that is at turns mutually supportive and antagonistic. Similarly, apocalyptic thought is presented not merely as an expectation or belief in the end of the world, but as a specific method of imagining a new world that is, in spite of itself, dependent upon the social world of the present. Apollinaire, Marinetti, and Pound were major figures in the so-called ‘Pre-war Avant-Garde’ having established their reputations in the decade prior to World War I. While they each began formulating and proclaiming their views on aesthetics prior to the war, the experience of war had a profound impact on all three. Accordingly, this thesis examines a number of poems from Apollinaire’s two major collections: Alcools (1913) and Calligrammes (1918), the latter containing significant reflections on avant-gardism and war. Marinetti acted as a journalist in the Italo-Turkish war of 1911-1912, which inspired the work central to this study: his Futurist novel-in-verse Le Monoplan du Pape (1912). Pound, unlike Apollinaire and Marinetti, did not participate in World War I, and this study explores his sequence Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (1920), a long rumination on art, war, and his engagement with Imagism and Vorticism, but also analyses poems from his collections Personae (1908), Ripostes (1912), and Lustra (1916). This study examines how the acute crisis of the war pressed each of these poets to reconsider their view of the poet-as-prophet in society. In doing so it explores the ethical or political implications of avant-garde aesthetics influenced by and as a response to war. This study also closely compares these poets’ works to the biblical literature from which they frequently derived prophetic and apocalyptic themes. Apollinaire, Marinetti, and Pound’s relationship to religion, particularly Christianity, spanned from ambivalence to hostility, but they each engage biblical literature in unique and unorthodox ways. While these poets all sought to be identifiably modern, this study demonstrates the ways in which they attempted to recover values from biblical literature that each felt was necessary to establish the independence and autonomy of contemporary art and literature. Therefore, this study’s comparative framework is intended to engage the conversation over the spiritual, religious, or transcendent values to which avant-garde art aspired. And drawing significantly from the social theories of art, religion, and culture developed by Max Weber and Pierre Bourdieu, this thesis contributes to the study of avant-gardism as a social, as well as aesthetic, phenomenon.
7

De Marinetti a Maiakovski destins d'un mouvement littéraire occidental en Russie /

Lehrmann Gandolfi, Graziela. January 1942 (has links)
Thesis - Université de Fribourg (Suisse) / Bibliography: p. [117]-133.
8

Through a "futuristic" lens : aesthetics of technology and film in the works of Gabriele D'Annunzio and F.T. Marinetti, 1909-1920 /

Syrimis, Michael. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Dept. of Comparative Literature, June 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
9

F.-T. Marinetti : une avant-garde entre la France et l’Italie / F.-T. Marinetti : an avant-garde between France and Italy

Fantino, Luca 19 November 2011 (has links)
Le futurisme aurait pu n’être qu’une école littéraire parmi les autres, fort nombreuses au début du XXème siècle. Il devient, par contre, un mouvement artistique pluridisciplinaire et international, s’appuyant sur une activité éditoriale frénétique et une stratégie publicitaire sans précédent. Le futurisme est plutôt un rêve, un idéal que Marinetti a essayé de réaliser pendant trente-cinq ans, c’est-à-dire de 1909 jusqu’à sa mort. Le mouvement futuriste n’est qu’un ensemble de tendances et d’idées constamment soumises à des changements dus aux tensions internes, à des phases de ruptures. Le mérite de Marinetti est d’avoir su rassembler des artistes différents, par tempérament ainsi que par histoire personnelle, des groupes éloignés soit du point de vue géographique que par leur sensibilité expressive, dans le but de créer une culture de la modernité spécifiquement italienne, jouant ainsi un rôle fondamental en ce qui concerne le renouvellement de la culture italienne. / Futurism might have been a literary school among the others, very numerous in the early twentieth century. It becomes, on the contrary, a multidisciplinary and international art movement, based on a frenetic publishing activity and a brand new advertising strategy. Futurism is a dream, an ideal that Marinetti sought to make for thirty-five years, from 1909 until his death. The Futurist movement is a set of trends, and ideas are constantly subject to change due to internal tensions, breakdowns in phases. The merit of Marinetti is to have put together different artists, either by temperament or by personal history, also distant groups according to the geographical point of view or their expressive sensitivity, to create a culture of modernity, specifically Italian, thus playing a fundamental role in the renewal of Italian culture.
10

Faits divers : national culture and modernism in Third World literary magazines

Micklethwait, Christopher Dwight 09 November 2010 (has links)
Commitments to cosmopolitanism and indigenism complicate the Modernist literature of the Third World. This study investigates the rhetorical and aesthetic responses of Third World "little magazines"--short-running, self-financed cultural magazines--to these two notions. These little magazine evolved with the daily newspaper as a tool favored by avant-garde movements for critiquing the social structures that produced it and for codifying their aesthetic and political principles. Comparing the Stridentist little magazine Horizonte (1926-1927) to D. H. Lawrence's novel The Plumed Serpent (1925), I argue that the Mexican Revolution created a climate of nationalism that reoriented the Stridentist movement away from a version of cosmopolitanism influenced by European modernist movements and toward a deeper interest in the Mexican folk and indigenous culture. Following form there, I consider the concept of cosmopolitanism in the Cuban novelist Alejo Carpentier's El Reino de este mundo (1949) in comparison to two Haitian magazines: La Revue Indigène (1927-1928) and Les Griots (1938-1940). Here I find that, while Carpentier stages a relatively global critique of primitivism as a false cosmopolitanism, the magazines La Revue Indigène and Les Griots reflect a turn from such a cosmopolitanism that values the primitive for its own sake toward a cultural nationalism invested in the real and imagined recuperation of Haiti's African origins through the study of folklore, Vodou, the Kreyòl language and poetic images of Africa. Finally, I compare Futurist F. T. Marinetti's Mafarka le futuriste: roman africain (1909) to the Egyptian literary magazine Al-Kātib Al-Miṣrī (1945-1948) in order to demonstrate the distance between Egyptian modernity in the European imagination and the self-conceived notions of Egyptian modernity. In Al-Kātib Al-Miṣrī, I find that these writers value cosmopolitanism, arguing that it is in fact indigenous to Egyptian culture itself and constructing their notion of Egyptian modernity around the maintenance of continuity with this indigenous cosmopolitanism. My examinations of these magazines suggests that, though the European avant-gardes and Third World literary Modernists may wield the little magazine similarly against hegemonic cultures, their purposes are divided over the roles cosmopolitanism and indigeneity play in the formation of national culture. / text

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