Showing 181 - 200 results of 386 for search '"Renaissance"', query time: 0.06s Refine Results
  1. 181

    La diversion comme genre : L’écriture et ses labyrinthes à l’époque élisabéthaine by Sophie Chiari-Lasserre

    Published 2005-01-01
    “…This paper focuses on the notion of “genre(s)” and tries to demonstrate that in the Renaissance England, artists often relied on a labyrinthine genre to improve the subtlety of the writings. …”
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  2. 182
  3. 183

    Swift's Alberti? The Geometrical Comedy of Gulliver's Travels by Selena Özbas

    Published 2024-10-01
    “…To explore this point, the article will draw on the Italian Renaissance humanist, satirist, and architect Leon Battista Alberti’s Momus and De Pictura. …”
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  4. 184

    PHILOSOPHY OF CULTURE M.M. BAKHTIN: HISTORICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL DIMENSION by Spartak Sh. Aytov

    Published 2013-09-01
    “…Bakhtin as a carnival, folk culture, culture of humor, doubleworld, concept social-cultural projection material and cultural bottom and its impact on the culture of laughter European Middle Ages and Renaissance. Methodological approaches Bakhtin recreated for historical and anthropological reconstruction mentality and socio-cultural realities of the high Middle Ages and the Renaissance. …”
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  5. 185

    Making the Past Audible: The Childlike Element and Renewal of Existence in Benjamin and Woolf by Anne-Marie Smith-Di Biasio

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…This allegory of renaissance is also a foundational paradigm in “Anon.” …”
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  6. 186
  7. 187

    Guardiniho dvojznačný postoj ku Kierkegaardovi pri interpretácii Pascala by Šajda, Peter

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…This author explored Pascal’s philosophy in the 1920s and 1930s when Germany experienced a large wave of interest in Kierkegaard’s thinking, known as the “Kierkegaard Renaissance.” Guardini participated actively in this renaissance but was strongly opposed to using Kierkegaard’s philosophy as an interpretative key for reading Pascal. …”
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  8. 188

    « Aver pensiero dell’abondanza » : les famines anciennes et modernes dans la tradition du Tacitisme florentin by Andrea Salvo Rossi

    “…This article analyses the literary genre of historical-political commentary typical of Renaissance political literature, emphasising the importance of its essentially Florentine origins. …”
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  9. 189

    Diseases and causes of death among the popes by Francois P. Retief, Louise Cilliers

    Published 2005-06-01
    “… The causes of death of popes are reviewed in the light of existing knowledge, and analysed in terms of four periods: First Period (64-604) Early Middle Ages (604-1054), Late Middle Ages and Renaissance (1054-1492), and Post-Renaissance (1492-2000). …”
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  10. 190

    « A reality that almost amounts to illusion » by Martine Lambert-Charbonnier

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…Walter Pater’s description of Mona Lisa in The Renaissance (1873) turns the famous picture – which as a portrait gives the faithful image of a real person – into a symbol of human aspirations. …”
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  11. 191
  12. 192

    Un pays à l’image d’une jambe humaine : anatomie de l’imaginaire géographique et paysager italien by Justine Balibar

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…This highly contemporary image is actually rooted in a much older image, which was just as popular during the Renaissance and which represented Italy as a human leg. …”
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  13. 193

    Osobnost a dílo Matouše Radouše a tvorba renesančních epitafů v Chrudimi by Ondřej Jakubec, Radka Milotová

    Published 2007-01-01
    “…Michael) they were intended for, we can imagine how the local Late Renaissance workshop functioned. The research into the life and work of the “regional” Renaissance painter Matouš Radouš has several aspects. …”
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  14. 194

    The Motif of Freedom, Human Dignity, and Awareness of a Common Human Destiny between Antiquity and Cervantes by Bojana Tomc

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…However, the humanistic note in his opus is most noticeable in his constant defense of freedom and human dignity and the value of the human being, reflecting the Renaissance concept of the human person. Freedom becomes a key element and cornerstone of Cervantes’ poetics, linking to the Renaissance tradition. …”
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  15. 195

    « Savoir historique » et transition. Le parcours d’Eugenio Garin by Pierre Girard

    Published 2012-11-01
    “…Dans cette perspective, l’étude de la Renaissance et plus précisément du rôle philosophique de la rhétorique prend une valeur politique, dans la mesure où elle offre en creux une critique de cette rhétorique creuse et perverse que Garin discerne dans le fascisme.…”
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  16. 196

    What Remains of Manhood by Eleonora Belligni

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The consequence is that this masculinisation of power is typical of the Renaissance and does not belong to the political culture of previous centuries. …”
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  17. 197

    Mina Loy’s Surrealist Strategies of Renewal by Diane Drouin

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…In her essay “Modern Poetry,” published in the little magazine Charm in 1925, the British artist Mina Loy identified the source of the renewal of the English language in the streets of New York, famously claiming: “It was inevitable that the renaissance of poetry should proceed out of America, where latterly a thousand languages have been born.” …”
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  18. 198

    „Folosul de obşte” sau despre umanismul baroc by Dan Horia Mazilu

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…The concept is a legacy of the Renaissance and the main meaning is that of an ethic and educational goal.…”
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  19. 199

    Distance in Art or the Art of Distance: the Illusory Search for Depth and its Treatment in the First Landscape Representations by Fernando Linares, Isaac Mendoza

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…Between the 14th and 16th centuries, art moved from narrative symbolism to naturalistic iconicity, accepting landscape as a pictorial genre. With the Renaissance, an authentic landscape view began to develop through deductive reasoning and the visual experience of the image, thus surpassing the basic and flat medieval iconography. …”
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  20. 200

    Transformation of Space Discourse: from Traditional Society to Postmodern Era by V. A. Shchipkov

    Published 2015-06-01
    “…The author refers the archaic society, the Antiquity and the Middle Ages to the traditional stage, the Renaissance, the Modernity and the Postmodernity to the post-traditional. …”
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