Ariosto, the Orlando Furioso, and English Culture
Herausgeber: Everson, Jane E; Jossa, Stefano; Hiscock, Andrew
Ariosto, the Orlando Furioso, and English Culture
Herausgeber: Everson, Jane E; Jossa, Stefano; Hiscock, Andrew
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The Orlando Furioso remains a masterpiece of Italian literature and stands as a key contribution to European Renaissance culture as a whole. This collection brings together cutting-edge research by international scholars and examines why Ariosto's magnum opus continues to excite cultural interest even today.
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The Orlando Furioso remains a masterpiece of Italian literature and stands as a key contribution to European Renaissance culture as a whole. This collection brings together cutting-edge research by international scholars and examines why Ariosto's magnum opus continues to excite cultural interest even today.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 374
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780197266502
- ISBN-10: 0197266509
- Artikelnr.: 55740615
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 374
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780197266502
- ISBN-10: 0197266509
- Artikelnr.: 55740615
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Jane E. Everson is Emeritus Professor of Italian Literature in the School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures at Royal Holloway. She is Associate Fellow of the Institute of Modern Languages Research, University of London, and Honorary Visiting Fellow of the University of Leicester. She has published widely on the chivalric epic tradition, Renaissance literature and culture. She directed the AHRC-funded projects: The Italian Academies 1525-1700: a themed collection database; and The Italian Academies 1525-1700: the first intellectual networks of early modern Europe. Andrew Hiscock is Professor of Early Modern Literature at Bangor University, Wales, and Marie Sklodowska-Curie Research Fellow at the Institut de Recherche pour la Renaissance, l'Age Classiques et les Lumières, Université Paul-Valéry, Montpellier III. He has published widely on English and French early modern literature. He is a Fellow of the English Association, a trustee of the Modern Humanities Research Association, English editor for the journal MLR, series editor for the Yearbook of English Studies and series co-editor for the Arden Early Modern Drama Guides. Stefano Jossa is Reader in Italian Studies at Royal Holloway, University of London, and has recently held Visiting Professorships at the Polytechnic (ETH) of Zurich, the University of Parma and the University of Roma Tre. His research interests include literature and culture in the Italian Renaissance and the construction of Italian national identity expressed through literature. He is the author of La fantasia e la memoria. Intertestualità ariostesche (Liguori 1996); Rappresentazione e scrittura. La crisi delle forme poetiche rinascimentali (1540-1560) (Vivarium 1996); Ariosto (il Mulino 2009); La fondazione di un genere. Il poema eroico tra Ariosto e Tasso (Carocci 2001).
* Acknowledgments
* List of Illustrations
* Notes on Contributors
* 1: Jane E. Everson, Andrew Hiscock, and Stefano Jossa: Introduction
* Part I: Before Reading - The Image
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: The Visualization of Orlando Furioso: From the
Original Editions to Modern Video Art
* 3: Luca degl'Innocenti: Reading the Poem 'in the Very Picture'. New
Evidence on Harington's Original Sin
* 4: Eleonora Stoppino: Ariosto's Seascapes: the British Isles and the
Orlando Furioso
* Part II: From the Elizabethans to the Enlightenment
* 5: Andrew Hiscock: 'englishing th'Italian Ariost': Orlando Furioso
among the Elizabethans. Adaptation and Audience
* 6: Tobias Gregory: Milton and Ariosto
* 7: Ita Mac Carthy: Fiordispina's English Afterlives: from Harington
to Ali Smith
* Part III: Gothic and Romantic Ariosto
* 8: Jane E.Everson: Ariosto in England in the Eighteenth Century: From
Antipathy and Ambivalence to Enthusiasm
* 9: Tim Carter: Lessons in Madness: Orlando Furioso on the
18th-Century Operatic Stage (with Special Reference to Handel)
* 10: Susan Oliver: Walter Scott and Ariosto's Orlando Furioso
* 11: Maureen McCue: Authorising Ariosto: The Construction of Ariosto
in Early Nineteenth-Century British Periodicals
* Part IV: Text and Translation in the Modern Era
* 12: Marco Dorigatti: Antonio Panizzi, Textual Editor of Ariosto
* 13: Martin McLaughlin: The Furioso in Translation: 'Lascivious'
Ariosto in Two Modern English Versions
* 14: Nicola Gardini: Orlando Furioso, Writing and the Construction of
Meaning
* 15: Stefano Jossa: Entertainment and Irony: Orlando Furioso from
Modern to Postmodern
* Bibliography
* List of Illustrations
* Notes on Contributors
* 1: Jane E. Everson, Andrew Hiscock, and Stefano Jossa: Introduction
* Part I: Before Reading - The Image
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: The Visualization of Orlando Furioso: From the
Original Editions to Modern Video Art
* 3: Luca degl'Innocenti: Reading the Poem 'in the Very Picture'. New
Evidence on Harington's Original Sin
* 4: Eleonora Stoppino: Ariosto's Seascapes: the British Isles and the
Orlando Furioso
* Part II: From the Elizabethans to the Enlightenment
* 5: Andrew Hiscock: 'englishing th'Italian Ariost': Orlando Furioso
among the Elizabethans. Adaptation and Audience
* 6: Tobias Gregory: Milton and Ariosto
* 7: Ita Mac Carthy: Fiordispina's English Afterlives: from Harington
to Ali Smith
* Part III: Gothic and Romantic Ariosto
* 8: Jane E.Everson: Ariosto in England in the Eighteenth Century: From
Antipathy and Ambivalence to Enthusiasm
* 9: Tim Carter: Lessons in Madness: Orlando Furioso on the
18th-Century Operatic Stage (with Special Reference to Handel)
* 10: Susan Oliver: Walter Scott and Ariosto's Orlando Furioso
* 11: Maureen McCue: Authorising Ariosto: The Construction of Ariosto
in Early Nineteenth-Century British Periodicals
* Part IV: Text and Translation in the Modern Era
* 12: Marco Dorigatti: Antonio Panizzi, Textual Editor of Ariosto
* 13: Martin McLaughlin: The Furioso in Translation: 'Lascivious'
Ariosto in Two Modern English Versions
* 14: Nicola Gardini: Orlando Furioso, Writing and the Construction of
Meaning
* 15: Stefano Jossa: Entertainment and Irony: Orlando Furioso from
Modern to Postmodern
* Bibliography
* Acknowledgments
* List of Illustrations
* Notes on Contributors
* 1: Jane E. Everson, Andrew Hiscock, and Stefano Jossa: Introduction
* Part I: Before Reading - The Image
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: The Visualization of Orlando Furioso: From the
Original Editions to Modern Video Art
* 3: Luca degl'Innocenti: Reading the Poem 'in the Very Picture'. New
Evidence on Harington's Original Sin
* 4: Eleonora Stoppino: Ariosto's Seascapes: the British Isles and the
Orlando Furioso
* Part II: From the Elizabethans to the Enlightenment
* 5: Andrew Hiscock: 'englishing th'Italian Ariost': Orlando Furioso
among the Elizabethans. Adaptation and Audience
* 6: Tobias Gregory: Milton and Ariosto
* 7: Ita Mac Carthy: Fiordispina's English Afterlives: from Harington
to Ali Smith
* Part III: Gothic and Romantic Ariosto
* 8: Jane E.Everson: Ariosto in England in the Eighteenth Century: From
Antipathy and Ambivalence to Enthusiasm
* 9: Tim Carter: Lessons in Madness: Orlando Furioso on the
18th-Century Operatic Stage (with Special Reference to Handel)
* 10: Susan Oliver: Walter Scott and Ariosto's Orlando Furioso
* 11: Maureen McCue: Authorising Ariosto: The Construction of Ariosto
in Early Nineteenth-Century British Periodicals
* Part IV: Text and Translation in the Modern Era
* 12: Marco Dorigatti: Antonio Panizzi, Textual Editor of Ariosto
* 13: Martin McLaughlin: The Furioso in Translation: 'Lascivious'
Ariosto in Two Modern English Versions
* 14: Nicola Gardini: Orlando Furioso, Writing and the Construction of
Meaning
* 15: Stefano Jossa: Entertainment and Irony: Orlando Furioso from
Modern to Postmodern
* Bibliography
* List of Illustrations
* Notes on Contributors
* 1: Jane E. Everson, Andrew Hiscock, and Stefano Jossa: Introduction
* Part I: Before Reading - The Image
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: The Visualization of Orlando Furioso: From the
Original Editions to Modern Video Art
* 3: Luca degl'Innocenti: Reading the Poem 'in the Very Picture'. New
Evidence on Harington's Original Sin
* 4: Eleonora Stoppino: Ariosto's Seascapes: the British Isles and the
Orlando Furioso
* Part II: From the Elizabethans to the Enlightenment
* 5: Andrew Hiscock: 'englishing th'Italian Ariost': Orlando Furioso
among the Elizabethans. Adaptation and Audience
* 6: Tobias Gregory: Milton and Ariosto
* 7: Ita Mac Carthy: Fiordispina's English Afterlives: from Harington
to Ali Smith
* Part III: Gothic and Romantic Ariosto
* 8: Jane E.Everson: Ariosto in England in the Eighteenth Century: From
Antipathy and Ambivalence to Enthusiasm
* 9: Tim Carter: Lessons in Madness: Orlando Furioso on the
18th-Century Operatic Stage (with Special Reference to Handel)
* 10: Susan Oliver: Walter Scott and Ariosto's Orlando Furioso
* 11: Maureen McCue: Authorising Ariosto: The Construction of Ariosto
in Early Nineteenth-Century British Periodicals
* Part IV: Text and Translation in the Modern Era
* 12: Marco Dorigatti: Antonio Panizzi, Textual Editor of Ariosto
* 13: Martin McLaughlin: The Furioso in Translation: 'Lascivious'
Ariosto in Two Modern English Versions
* 14: Nicola Gardini: Orlando Furioso, Writing and the Construction of
Meaning
* 15: Stefano Jossa: Entertainment and Irony: Orlando Furioso from
Modern to Postmodern
* Bibliography