The Oxford Handbook of Dante
Herausgeber: Gragnolati, Manuele; Southerden, Francesca; Lombardi, Elena
The Oxford Handbook of Dante
Herausgeber: Gragnolati, Manuele; Southerden, Francesca; Lombardi, Elena
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
The Oxford Handbook of Dante contains forty-four specially written chapters that provide a thorough and creative reading of Dante's oeuvre. It encompasses diverse approaches and spans several disciplines: philology, material culture, history, religion, art history, visual studies, literary theory, queer, post- and de-colonial, and feminist studies.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Lucia Alma WolfThe Unexpected Dante96,99 €
- Dante AlighieriThe Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri22,99 €
- DanteThe Inferno of Dante20,99 €
- Dante AlighieriThe Divine Comedy24,99 €
- Dante AlighieriThe Divine Comedy14,99 €
- Elena Lombardi (University of Oxfor Associate Professor of ItalianImagining the Woman Reader in the Age of Dante120,99 €
- Peter Hainsworth (Lady Margaret Hall Oxford Emeritus Fellow)Dante12,99 €
-
-
-
The Oxford Handbook of Dante contains forty-four specially written chapters that provide a thorough and creative reading of Dante's oeuvre. It encompasses diverse approaches and spans several disciplines: philology, material culture, history, religion, art history, visual studies, literary theory, queer, post- and de-colonial, and feminist studies.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 778
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 178mm x 50mm
- Gewicht: 1522g
- ISBN-13: 9780198820741
- ISBN-10: 0198820747
- Artikelnr.: 60744986
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 778
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 178mm x 50mm
- Gewicht: 1522g
- ISBN-13: 9780198820741
- ISBN-10: 0198820747
- Artikelnr.: 60744986
Manuele Gragnolati, Co-editor, is Professor of Medieval Italian Literature at Sorbonne Université, Associate Director of the ICI Berlin Institute for Cultural Inquiry, and Senior Research Fellow at Somerville College, Oxford. He is the author of Experiencing the Afterlife: Soul and Body in Dante and Medieval Culture (2005) and Amor che move. Linguaggio del corpo e forma del desiderio in Dante and Medieval Culture (2013), and the co-editor of several volumes, including Desire in Dante and the Middle Ages (2012) and Vita nova. Fiore. Epistola XIII (2018). Elena Lombardi is Professor of Italian Literature at Oxford, and the Paget Toynbee Fellow at Balliol College. She is the author of The Syntax of Desire: Language and Love in Augustine, the Modistae and Dante (2007), The Wings of the Doves: Love and Desire in Dante and Medieval Culture (2012), and Imagining the Woman Reader in the Age of Dante (2018). Francesca Southerden is Associate Professor of Medieval Italian at Somerville College, Oxford. She has written several articles on Dante and Petrarch and is author of Landscapes of Desire in the Poetry of Vittorio Sereni (2012). She is currently working on Dante and Petrarch in the Garden of Language.
* Introduction. Dante Unbound: A Vulnerable Life and the Openness of
Interpretation
* Part I: Texts and Textuality
* 1: Justin Steinberg: The author
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: Memory
* 3: Mary Carruthers: Reading
* 4: Martin Eisner: Materiality of the text and manuscript culture
* 5: Fabio Zinelli: The manuscript tradition, or on editing Dante
* 6: Luca Fiorentini: Commentary (both by Dante and on Dante)
* 7: Akash Kumar: Digital Dante
* Part II: Dialogues
* 8: Zygmunt G. Baranski: The Classics
* 9: Antonio Montefusco: Roman de la Rose
* 10: William Burgwinkle: Troubadours
* 11: Roberto Rea: Early Italian lyric
* 12: Fabian Alfie: Comic culture
* 13: Gervase Rosser: Visual culture
* Part III: Transforming Knowledge
* 14: Franziska Meier: Encyclopaedism
* 15: Natascia Tonelli: Medicine
* 16: Simon Gilson: Visual theory
* 17: Diego Quaglioni: The law
* 18: Tristan Kay: Politics
* 19: Pasquale Porro: Philosophy and theology
* 20: Alessandro Vettori: Religion
* 21: Elena Lombardi: Poetry
* Part IV: Space(s) and places
* 22: Giuliano Milani: Florence and Rome
* 23: Elisa Brilli: Civitas/Community
* 24: Karla Mallette: The Mediterranean
* 25: Brenda Deen Schildgen: The East
* 26: Johannes Bartuschat: Exile
* 27: Theodore J. Cachey, Jr.: Travelling/wandering/mapping
* 28: Peter Hawkins: Dante's other worlds
* Part V: A passionate selfhood
* 29: Manuele Gragnolati: Eschatological anthropology
* 30: Heather Webb: Language
* 31: Bernard McGinn: The mystical
* 32: Cary Howie: Bodies on fire
* Part VI: A non-linear Dante
* 33: Nicolò Crisafi: The master narrative and its paradoxes
* 34: Jennifer Rushworth: Conversion, palinody, traces
* 35: Francesca Southerden: The lyric mode
* 36: Teodolinda Barolini: Errancy: A brief history of Dante's Ferm
Voler
* Part VII: Nachleben
* 37: Martin McLaughlin: Translations
* 38: Rossend Arqués Corominas: Dante and the performing arts
* 39: John David Rhodes: Dante on screen
* 40: Daniela Caselli: Modernist Dante
* 41: Lino Pertile: Dante and the Shoah
* 42: Jason Allen-Paisant: Dante in Caribbean poetics: Language, power,
race
* 43: Gary Cestaro: Queering Dante
* 44: Marguerite Waller: A decolonial feminist Dante: Imperial
historiography and gender
Interpretation
* Part I: Texts and Textuality
* 1: Justin Steinberg: The author
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: Memory
* 3: Mary Carruthers: Reading
* 4: Martin Eisner: Materiality of the text and manuscript culture
* 5: Fabio Zinelli: The manuscript tradition, or on editing Dante
* 6: Luca Fiorentini: Commentary (both by Dante and on Dante)
* 7: Akash Kumar: Digital Dante
* Part II: Dialogues
* 8: Zygmunt G. Baranski: The Classics
* 9: Antonio Montefusco: Roman de la Rose
* 10: William Burgwinkle: Troubadours
* 11: Roberto Rea: Early Italian lyric
* 12: Fabian Alfie: Comic culture
* 13: Gervase Rosser: Visual culture
* Part III: Transforming Knowledge
* 14: Franziska Meier: Encyclopaedism
* 15: Natascia Tonelli: Medicine
* 16: Simon Gilson: Visual theory
* 17: Diego Quaglioni: The law
* 18: Tristan Kay: Politics
* 19: Pasquale Porro: Philosophy and theology
* 20: Alessandro Vettori: Religion
* 21: Elena Lombardi: Poetry
* Part IV: Space(s) and places
* 22: Giuliano Milani: Florence and Rome
* 23: Elisa Brilli: Civitas/Community
* 24: Karla Mallette: The Mediterranean
* 25: Brenda Deen Schildgen: The East
* 26: Johannes Bartuschat: Exile
* 27: Theodore J. Cachey, Jr.: Travelling/wandering/mapping
* 28: Peter Hawkins: Dante's other worlds
* Part V: A passionate selfhood
* 29: Manuele Gragnolati: Eschatological anthropology
* 30: Heather Webb: Language
* 31: Bernard McGinn: The mystical
* 32: Cary Howie: Bodies on fire
* Part VI: A non-linear Dante
* 33: Nicolò Crisafi: The master narrative and its paradoxes
* 34: Jennifer Rushworth: Conversion, palinody, traces
* 35: Francesca Southerden: The lyric mode
* 36: Teodolinda Barolini: Errancy: A brief history of Dante's Ferm
Voler
* Part VII: Nachleben
* 37: Martin McLaughlin: Translations
* 38: Rossend Arqués Corominas: Dante and the performing arts
* 39: John David Rhodes: Dante on screen
* 40: Daniela Caselli: Modernist Dante
* 41: Lino Pertile: Dante and the Shoah
* 42: Jason Allen-Paisant: Dante in Caribbean poetics: Language, power,
race
* 43: Gary Cestaro: Queering Dante
* 44: Marguerite Waller: A decolonial feminist Dante: Imperial
historiography and gender
* Introduction. Dante Unbound: A Vulnerable Life and the Openness of
Interpretation
* Part I: Texts and Textuality
* 1: Justin Steinberg: The author
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: Memory
* 3: Mary Carruthers: Reading
* 4: Martin Eisner: Materiality of the text and manuscript culture
* 5: Fabio Zinelli: The manuscript tradition, or on editing Dante
* 6: Luca Fiorentini: Commentary (both by Dante and on Dante)
* 7: Akash Kumar: Digital Dante
* Part II: Dialogues
* 8: Zygmunt G. Baranski: The Classics
* 9: Antonio Montefusco: Roman de la Rose
* 10: William Burgwinkle: Troubadours
* 11: Roberto Rea: Early Italian lyric
* 12: Fabian Alfie: Comic culture
* 13: Gervase Rosser: Visual culture
* Part III: Transforming Knowledge
* 14: Franziska Meier: Encyclopaedism
* 15: Natascia Tonelli: Medicine
* 16: Simon Gilson: Visual theory
* 17: Diego Quaglioni: The law
* 18: Tristan Kay: Politics
* 19: Pasquale Porro: Philosophy and theology
* 20: Alessandro Vettori: Religion
* 21: Elena Lombardi: Poetry
* Part IV: Space(s) and places
* 22: Giuliano Milani: Florence and Rome
* 23: Elisa Brilli: Civitas/Community
* 24: Karla Mallette: The Mediterranean
* 25: Brenda Deen Schildgen: The East
* 26: Johannes Bartuschat: Exile
* 27: Theodore J. Cachey, Jr.: Travelling/wandering/mapping
* 28: Peter Hawkins: Dante's other worlds
* Part V: A passionate selfhood
* 29: Manuele Gragnolati: Eschatological anthropology
* 30: Heather Webb: Language
* 31: Bernard McGinn: The mystical
* 32: Cary Howie: Bodies on fire
* Part VI: A non-linear Dante
* 33: Nicolò Crisafi: The master narrative and its paradoxes
* 34: Jennifer Rushworth: Conversion, palinody, traces
* 35: Francesca Southerden: The lyric mode
* 36: Teodolinda Barolini: Errancy: A brief history of Dante's Ferm
Voler
* Part VII: Nachleben
* 37: Martin McLaughlin: Translations
* 38: Rossend Arqués Corominas: Dante and the performing arts
* 39: John David Rhodes: Dante on screen
* 40: Daniela Caselli: Modernist Dante
* 41: Lino Pertile: Dante and the Shoah
* 42: Jason Allen-Paisant: Dante in Caribbean poetics: Language, power,
race
* 43: Gary Cestaro: Queering Dante
* 44: Marguerite Waller: A decolonial feminist Dante: Imperial
historiography and gender
Interpretation
* Part I: Texts and Textuality
* 1: Justin Steinberg: The author
* 2: Lina Bolzoni: Memory
* 3: Mary Carruthers: Reading
* 4: Martin Eisner: Materiality of the text and manuscript culture
* 5: Fabio Zinelli: The manuscript tradition, or on editing Dante
* 6: Luca Fiorentini: Commentary (both by Dante and on Dante)
* 7: Akash Kumar: Digital Dante
* Part II: Dialogues
* 8: Zygmunt G. Baranski: The Classics
* 9: Antonio Montefusco: Roman de la Rose
* 10: William Burgwinkle: Troubadours
* 11: Roberto Rea: Early Italian lyric
* 12: Fabian Alfie: Comic culture
* 13: Gervase Rosser: Visual culture
* Part III: Transforming Knowledge
* 14: Franziska Meier: Encyclopaedism
* 15: Natascia Tonelli: Medicine
* 16: Simon Gilson: Visual theory
* 17: Diego Quaglioni: The law
* 18: Tristan Kay: Politics
* 19: Pasquale Porro: Philosophy and theology
* 20: Alessandro Vettori: Religion
* 21: Elena Lombardi: Poetry
* Part IV: Space(s) and places
* 22: Giuliano Milani: Florence and Rome
* 23: Elisa Brilli: Civitas/Community
* 24: Karla Mallette: The Mediterranean
* 25: Brenda Deen Schildgen: The East
* 26: Johannes Bartuschat: Exile
* 27: Theodore J. Cachey, Jr.: Travelling/wandering/mapping
* 28: Peter Hawkins: Dante's other worlds
* Part V: A passionate selfhood
* 29: Manuele Gragnolati: Eschatological anthropology
* 30: Heather Webb: Language
* 31: Bernard McGinn: The mystical
* 32: Cary Howie: Bodies on fire
* Part VI: A non-linear Dante
* 33: Nicolò Crisafi: The master narrative and its paradoxes
* 34: Jennifer Rushworth: Conversion, palinody, traces
* 35: Francesca Southerden: The lyric mode
* 36: Teodolinda Barolini: Errancy: A brief history of Dante's Ferm
Voler
* Part VII: Nachleben
* 37: Martin McLaughlin: Translations
* 38: Rossend Arqués Corominas: Dante and the performing arts
* 39: John David Rhodes: Dante on screen
* 40: Daniela Caselli: Modernist Dante
* 41: Lino Pertile: Dante and the Shoah
* 42: Jason Allen-Paisant: Dante in Caribbean poetics: Language, power,
race
* 43: Gary Cestaro: Queering Dante
* 44: Marguerite Waller: A decolonial feminist Dante: Imperial
historiography and gender