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         Italian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Italian Literature in Translation by Miller O'Neal McDonnell, 1970
  2. The construction of the poem.(Italian Literature Today): An article from: World Literature Today by Giovanni Giudici, 1997-03-22
  3. The Epic Poens of the Renaissance (Il Narratore Italian Literature on Tape) by Christina Giacometti, Maurizio Falghera, 1998-01-01
  4. The Festa Et Storia Di Sancta Caterina: A Medieval Italian Religious Drama (Studies in the Humanities: Literature-Politics-Society)
  5. Italo Calvino and the Compass of Literature (Toronto Italian Studies) by Eugenio Bolongaro, 2003-09-27
  6. Introducing Italian Americana: Generalities on Literature and Film (Via Folios, 40) by Fred Gardaphe, Paolo Giordano, et all 2006-09-26
  7. Italian Verbs For Dummies (For Dummies (Language & Literature)) by Teresa L. Picarazzi, 2006-09-05
  8. A Reference Grammar of Medieval Italian According to Dante, With a Dual Language Edition of the Vita Nova (Studies in Italian Literature) by Joseph F. Privitera, 2000-11
  9. Periphrases aspectuelles de l'italien: Le cas de andare, venire et staregerondif (European university studies. Series IX, Italian language and literature) by Giovanna Brianti, 1992
  10. Painting with Words, Writing with Pictures: Word and Image Relations in the Work of Italo Calvino (Toronto Italian Studies) by Franco Ricci, 2001-12-29
  11. On Liberal Revolution (Italian Literature and Thought) by Piero Gobetti, 2000-08-11
  12. The Complete Lyric Poems of Dante Alighieri (Studies in Italian Literature) by Dante Alighieri, 1997-03
  13. America in modern Italian literature, by Donald Heiney, 1965
  14. The Dialect Poetry of Nino Martoglio: Sociolinguistic Issues in a Literary Context (Studies in Italian Culture Literature in History) by Antonio Scuderi, 1991-12

41. Section: 18.29 Italian Literature
Translate this page Section 18.29 italian literature. General Origini/Duecento Trecento Quattrocento/Cinquecento Seicento Settecento Ottocento Novecento.
http://www.kb.nl/dutchess/18/29/
Section: 18.29 Italian literature
General
Origini/Duecento

Trecento

Quattrocento/Cinquecento
...
Novecento

42. Glbtq >> Literature >> Italian Literature
Until quite recently, male homosexuality has had a discontinuous, fragmented, and largely condemnatory history in italian literature, and lesbianism has been
http://www.glbtq.com/literature/italian_lit.html
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Alpha Index: A-B C-F G-K L-Q ... T-Z Subjects: A-B C-E F-L M-Z
Italian Literature
page: Italy figures large in the Western homoerotic imagination: The novels of Henry James, E. M. Forster, Thomas Mann, and more recently Edmund White testify to the persuasive romance of Italy as a favored location for the gay writer. External perceptions of Italy, however, continue to oscillate between two contrasting mythical poles. It is either seen as the prehistoric land of sexually available nymphs and shepherds or is condemned to remain the cenotaph of high culture in which homosexual aesthetes can vent their artistic sensibility. Sponsor Message.
Both versions have probably played a part in the varied constructions of gay identity but say little about the historical realities and cultural representations of homosexuality in Italy itself. The Problems in Discovering a Homosexual Tradition The discussion of homosexuality in Italy is complicated also because it is difficult to view the peninsula as a single historical or geographical unit before Unification in 1870, and even today Italy is marked by enormous social and cultural diversity.

43. Facts, Fictions, Fakes: Italian Literature In The 1970s - Jennifer Burns
Facts, Fictions, Fakes italian literature in the 1970s Jennifer Burns. University of Warwick. Abstract PDF version for downloading Footnotes .
http://www.cf.ac.uk/euros/newreadings/volume6/burnsj.html
Volume 6
Facts, Fictions, Fakes: Italian Literature in the 1970s
Jennifer Burns
University of Warwick Abstract PDF version for downloading Footnotes The 1970s are problematic years in the history of the Italian Republic, in the sense both of contemporary experience and of retrospective analysis of them. The decade can be said to have begun in late 1969, following the 'hot autumn' ('autunno caldo') of demonstrations by industrial workers throughout Italy (but concentrated in the industrial north). This surge in popular left-wing militancy prompted extreme right-wing elements within the government and the military to take covert action to turn public opinion against the left. This was the 'strategy of tension' ('strategia della tensione'), which aimed to exacerbate instability in the political climate by committing acts of public violence which might be passed off as the work of left-wing activists, so paving the way for the imposition of military rule. The first move was a bomb detonated in a bank in Piazza Fontana in central Milan on 12th December 1969, killing sixteen people. A left-wing activist was arrested and died during the police investigation: a sequence of events dramatized in Dario Fo's Accidental Death of an Anarchist Left-wing extremist activity was linked with various protest movements arising from the demonstrations of the late 1960s. These are crudely divisible into three categories: the students' movement, which had reached one climax in 1968, but, after a period of pronounced and disillusioned anti-climax, gained momentum again in 1977; and the workers' movement, which, after the flashpoint of 1969, continued to exert pressure on management and on the government until 1980, when FIAT management's defeat of the unions signalled the end of an era. The women's movement was not linked with terrorism, and was the most active and growing of the three areas of protest in the 1970s, having effects both at local level (e.g. consciousness-raising groups) and national (legislation on divorce, abortion, equal rights in the workplace).

44. USMC Library - Research Guide To Italian Literature
Research Guide to italian literature Robarts Reference PQ 4037 .P8. A survey of sources on the history and criticism of italian literature.
http://www.utoronto.ca/stmikes/library/research_guides/rgitalianliterature.htm

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Research Guide to Italian Literature
Reference and Resource Guides Guide to Reference Books . Edited by R. Balay and others. Eleventh edition. Chicago: American Library Association, 1996.
[St. Michael's Reference - Z 1035.1 .G89] This annotated guide is an excellent way for researchers who are new to Italian literature to identify the most useful sources in the field such as critical reviews, guidebooks, histories, and dictionaries. Manuale Critico-Bibliografico per lo Studio della Letteratura Italiana
[Robarts Reference - PQ 4037 .P8] A survey of sources on the history and criticism of Italian literature. It includes extensive bibliographies on Italian authors and literary issues. Guida allo studio della letteratura italiana.

45. Virtualitalia.com - Language - Quick History Of Italian Literature
to the contemporary times a quick history of italian literature By Roberto Simmarano. Futurismo The Futurist movement proclaimed
http://www.virtualitalia.com/language/literature_history5.shtml
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a quick history of italian literature

By Roberto Simmarano Futurismo
The Futurist movement proclaimed vast change for all the arts and even proposed new life-styles and a new philosophy. In the general irrationalism of the early 20th century, the Futurists sought to be the voice of the dynamism of the modern world, praising the new machine age and glorifying - in varying degrees of velleity - irrational energy, immediate and aggressive energy, violence, heroism and war. The Futurist writers (Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Corrado Govoni, Giovanni Papini, Aldo Palazzeschi) searched for fresh modes of expression that led them to a new analysis of language, involving a rejection of syntax, with the aim of expressing the "nowness" of the workings of the psyche through analogy and suggestion. Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936) The works of Luigi Pirandello (Nobel Prize for Literature in 1934) originated on the fringes of Realism but soon took on their own identity by their bitter and paradoxically ironic view of life. Pirandello focussed on the individual, his anxieties and his desperate attempts to live, to be someone, which always go unsatisfied and finish in bizarre, often insane gestures. In an indecipherable universe all appears relative, including the individual, whose discovery of this emptiness and the insignificance of existence is at the heart of Pirandello's novels ( Uno, Nessuno, Centomila

46. Virtualitalia.com - Language - Quick History Of Italian Literature
out of the dark a quick history of italian literature By Roberto Simmarano. The origins of italian literature The rise of a literature
http://www.virtualitalia.com/language/literature_history1.shtml
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a quick history of italian literature

By Roberto Simmarano The origins of Italian Literature
The rise of a literature, both written and spoken, in the vernacular began in the 13th century; a period of great political and civil revival in the Italian cities and a lively renaissance in art and culture after the difficult centuries following barbarian domination. There were a great number of trends in 13th-century literature: religious poetry (which thrived in Umbria partly as a result of the activity of Saint Francis, especially with the work of Jacopone da Todi); poetry made popular by the French jongleurs; the comic-satirical poetry of Cecco Angiolieri ; chivalric literature (the chansons de geste derived from the French); didactic and moralistic prose in which Brunetto Latini was prominent, and, the most widespread, love poetry. The Sicilian and Tuscan poets The first Italian poetry written with literary pretensions emerged, and flourished in Sicily at the Court of the Emperor Frederick II, starting from around 1220 and inspired by the Provencal love lyrics. The poets of the Sicilian school (Guido delle Colonne, Pier dela Vigna, Cielo Dalcamo) treated their single theme of love according to the courtly model. In this way a poetic tradition was begun in which the vernacular Italian was increasingly cleansed of dialectical excess. Later this trend spread to central Italy, especially Tuscany where the poets (Chiaro Davanzati, Compiuta Donzella) expanded and enriched the Sicilian lyric by confronting moral and political themes which reflected the ideals of Communal life.

47. Italian Literature Course In Italy @ Il Sillabo
italian literature course at Il Sillabo an analysis of texts, their style and contents as a startingpoint for studying literature.
http://www.sillabo.it/corsi/italian_literature_course.html

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Students/agents are kindly requested to inform us on arrival details as soon as possible and they will receive a confirmation of pick up service. At the gate a person of our staff will be waiting for the student(s) with a board with the name of the student(s) written on and the name of the school (Il Sillabo).
Emergency number for pick up is 3397219271. HOME COURSES
ITALIAN LITERATURE COURSE
COURSE DETAILS Details:
8 hours, 2 or 1 lessons a week, 2 hours each. Duration of course: 2 or 4 weeks. Contents: an analysis of texts, their style and contents as a starting-point for studying literature. The teacher according to students' needs and wishes selects subjects. One example: Il Dolce Stil Novo, Dante Alighieri, Divina Commedia and love Poems. Price: (lecture notes included) Enroll now Free infopack Cooking lessons Wine lessons History of Art Antique Furniture Archaeology Italian Literature Ceramic decoration Intensive Course Super Intensive Course Combined Course Individual lessons ... INTERNSHIP PROGRAMME Join our mailing list , you will know all our new initiatives and offers!

48. Fascism & Resistance In Italian Literature & Cinema
Italiana”. Fascism Resistance in italian literature Cinema. M credits.). Fascism Resistance in italian literature Cinema Syllabus *. Week
http://web.utk.edu/~brizio/htm/lit2.htm
Flavia Brizio-Skov
Associate Professor of Italian
University of Tennessee Literature
Spaghetti Westerns
home
M 2:30/3:30 HSS
W 2:30/5:30 Hodges Library-Audiovisual
The course will meet twice a week: Monday for one hour (in HSS), and Wednesday for a three hour session (in Hodges-Audiovisual) to allow for film viewing and discussion. The class will be conducted in English. The course is designed for both non-majors and majors of Italian (Italian majors and minors will read the literary works in Italian). All the films are in Italian with English subtitles, and all the literary texts are available in translation. There are no prerequisites. Requirements will include one mid-term, one final, and one class presentation. For further information contact Flavia Brizio, Department of Romance Languages (tel. 974-2311). (Because the content of this course changes, students may take this course twice, for up to 6 credits.)
Week I Jan 14 Week II Jan 19 HOLIDAY - Martin Luther King Day Jan 21 Men and not Men (book 1945 Vittorini) The conformist (film Bertolucci 1970, 116) discussion

49. < Italian Literature >
italian art italian cinema italian newspapers italian music italian language italian design italian cuisine italian opera italian exercises italian fashion
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50. < Italian Literature >
italian literature. The Cantico delle Creature (Song of All Creatures) written by St. Francis of Assisi in 1225 is the earliest known
http://www.italianculture.net/english/literature.html
Italian Literature The Cantico delle Creature (Song of All Creatures) written by St. Francis of Assisi in 1225 is the earliest known literary work written in the Italian language. In the XIVth cent. lived and worked three of the greatest figures in Italian literature: Dante Petrarch and Boccaccio , father of the novel, whose Decameron is a mirror of merchant-class life of the times and characterises single individuals by focussing on the things they do; this work became a genre model for centuries that followed. In the XVth and XVth cents. poems of chivalry were much in vogue, comprising epic tales of heroic deeds in faraway times: Torquato Tasso in his Gerusalemme Liberata Jerusalem Freed ) of 1575 revived the genre into a veritable masterpiece of its kind. Treatises also abounded during these two centuries and in his Principe The Prince ) of 1513 describes this role figure in a realistic manner: his political merits are his strong point, along with cynicism and resolution. Machiavelli is famed for paving the way towards politics as a separate branch of learning conceived of as a skill to be acquired for solving practical problems. The XVIIIth cent. saw the reform of the theatre with

51. Italian Literature Links
Home. italian literature LINKS. Biblioteca literature. Resources for the study of italian literature. A work in progress, the “Risorse” are useful.
http://www.sla.purdue.edu/academic/fll/Italian/itlit.html
Home
ITALIAN LITERATURE LINKS Biblioteca dei Classici Italiani
Fast, User-friendly; Useful, particularly for major authors of middle ages and renaissance. Includes full texts of major works, biographies, and introductions. De Bibliotheca
Full text versions of most of the major works of Italian literature and of many of the minor ones.
Xlisabethautrici:

An Italian site dedicated to women authors of the world. Decameron Web
Italica

A website dedicated to the dissemination of Italian culture abroad.
Liber Liber

Short bios of many Italian authors; secondary literature; full text of many works. Letteratura Italiana
Antologia (frammentaria) della A somewhat confusing selection of easily accessible full texts Italy1 dot com's Literature Links A quick English language overview of Italy, including its history and literature. Resources for the study of Italian literature. Bobst Library at New York University Full text versions of many works divided by centuries and then by author Italian Studies Web Literature A major portal to Italian studies Italinemo: Riviste di Italianistica nel Mondo All (?) Italian studies journals world-wide. Includes editors, synopsis of articles; contents, etc.

52. Italian Literature From Grant & Cutler
You are here Catalogues italian literature This is the italian literature section of the online edition of our 20032004 Five Languages catalogue.
http://www.grantandcutler.com/catalogues/italian/main/b03ilit.htm
Home Catalogues Mail Order Order Form ... Important Price Information You are here: Catalogues Italian
This is the Italian Literature section of the online edition of our 2003-2004 Five Languages catalogue. See below for contents. The section contains a selection of popular A level and undergraduate Italian literary texts along with some works of criticism and translations that may be of interest. Please note that this catalogue gives only a selection of our stock. We have an extensive fiction section for both classics and modern fiction in our shop. We are able to obtain any title available in print in Italy. This catalogue was produced in early Summer 2003 and prices are not necessarily current. For current prices and availability, please contact us. ***DISCOUNT***DISCOUNT***DISCOUNT***DISCOUNT***DISCOUNT
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Symbols used on these pages: New! a new entry (not in our 2002-2003 catalogue) - A an annotated text Primary Italian texts and critical studies General Italian literary criticism Search powered by FreeFind
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53. The Language Of Literature. Italian Language Courses In Florence With Learn Lang
Home Page, italian literature. This course consists of 4 lessons in a Standard Language Course plus 2 private tutorials on italian literature, each day.
http://www.languages.ie/htms/ldv_literature.htm
Home Page ITALIAN LITERATURE Starting dates: every 2 weeks
Duration:
2 weeks
Lessons: 30 per week
Tuition: from the 3rd ability level on
This course consists of 4 lessons in a Standard Language Course plus 2 private tutorials on Italian Literature, each day. The program can be carried out in several ways: A) a look at the main Italian authors of this century, at literary trends and movements, with readings and stylistic analyses of important passages B) the presentation and analysis of a specific movement or author C) the presentation and analysis of a particular work Program A: Interpretations of the Novecento Benedetto Croce The futurists Pirandello and theater Italo Svevo Narrative in the early Novecento: Moravia Neo-realism Post-war: between memory and myth Experimental narrative Post-war poetry Neo-avant-garde and contemporary narrative Programs B and C: If a student is particularly interested in a literary movement, in an author or in a particular work, the course can focus entirely on that topic. In such cases, we recommend that the student inform us before arriving in order to give the instructor sufficient time to prepare a specific program with selected texts Example of Program B: Pier Paolo Pasolini Biography, his works in the language of Friuli, his political involvement with the Communist Party, his first novel (Il sogno di una cosa), his mature novels (Ragazzi di vita and Una vita violenta), his participation in the magazine Officina, his collection of poetry Le ceneri di Gramsci, his screenplays, essays and collected writings, his tragedies in verse (Orgia Calderon, Affubulazione), his posthumous collected poetry (Amado mio and Atti impuri)

54. English And Italian Literature
English and italian literature. c. Department of Italian. UCAS Code. QR33 BA/EIL4. Module 3 (Core) Comparative Literature Italian and English Short Fiction.
http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/study/undergraduate/arts/italian/qr33baeil4/
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    English and Italian Literature
    [c] Department of Italian
    UCAS Code
    QR33 BA/EIL4 Year One
    Year Two
    Year Three
    Year Four Return to top
    Year One
    Module 1: (Core) Italian for Beginners or Modern Italian Language I. Module 2: (Core) either Representations of Modern Italy or Textual Readings or Cross Cultural Approaches to Italy. Module 3: (Core) The Epic Tradition. Module 4: (Option) either Medieval to Renaissance English Literature or Literature in the Modern World. Return to top
    Year Two
    Year abroad at an Italian university. Return to top
    Year Three
    Module 1: (Core) Modern Italian Language II. Module 2: (Option) One option from the Italian List of Optional Modules. Module 3: (Core) Comparative Literature: Italian and English Short Fiction. Module 4: (Option) either Poetry and Society: Romantics and Victorians or The European Novel.

55. English And Italian Literature (QR33)
Powered by Sitebuilder © MMIV. English and italian literature (QR33). c. It should be noted that not all modules listed under the
http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/services/quality/courseregs/undergrad/italian_studies/
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      English and Italian Literature (QR33)
      [c] It should be noted that not all modules listed under the following degree courses are necessarily available in any one academic year and modules not listed here may be available.
      Course Requirement
      Candidates must satisfy the University's General Entrance Requirements and must possess an 'A' level pass in English Literature.
      Scheme of Study
      Four years full-time study leading to the degree of BA (Honours) in English and Italian Literature or of BA (Pass) in English and Italian Literature (UCAS course no. QR33). Students transferring to a Pass degree either (exceptionally) at the end of the first year or during the second or third year will be expected to drop one module in each of the following years. IT 301 Modern Italian Language II, and IT 401 Modern Italian Language III are compulsory. Candidates for Pass degrees will be permitted to take the normal Honours load in order to make it possible for them to apply for reinstatement to Honours. Modules dropped will not normally be taken from those listed below as core modules.

56. Title Details - Cambridge University Press
Home Catalogue The Cambridge History of italian literature. Related Areas The Cambridge History of italian literature. Edited by Peter Brand, Lino Pertile.
http://titles.cambridge.org/catalogue.asp?ISBN=0521434920

57. Medieval Italian Literature
18119. Medieval italian literature. Fall 2003 / Prof. Deborah Contrada.
http://twist.lib.uiowa.edu/dante/
Medieval Italian Literature Fall 2003 / Prof. Deborah Contrada Top Syllabus Resources Immagini ... Letture Instructor: Deborah Contrada [ deborah-contrada@uiowa.edu
Research Librarian: Kathy Magarrell [ kathy-magarrell@uiowa.edu
For technical help with this web site, click here TWIST , University Libraries, The University of Iowa.
URL: http://twist.lib.uiowa.edu/dante/index.html
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58. Italian Literature
italian literature. dePaola, T. (1984). The mysterious giant of Barletta. Orlando, FL Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. A statue becomes
http://old.weber.edu/loda/italian.htm
Italian Literature
dePaola, T. (1984). The mysterious giant of Barletta. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. A statue becomes the key element to saving the town of Barletta from being attacked by an army. Return to Multicultural Literature Home Page

59. Babelguides: Italian Literature
You are at Home — Books — italian literature. SPECIALS 60% discount! A set of nine printed Babel Guides. italian literature front cover.
http://www.babelguides.com/view/lit/ital
Your site for world literature in English translation home guides publishers authors ... contact :: Browse Books :: African Austrian Brazilian Chinese Dutch and Flemish Eastern European French German Hungarian Indian Italian Japanese Jewish Latin American Middle Eastern Portuguese Portuguese African Russian Scandinavian Slavic Spanish Yiddish You are at Home Books Italian Literature SPECIALS 60% discount!
The complete Dalkey Archive translated collection: 70 books for $
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Italian Literature
Isolina
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The Iguana [Buy Direct] by Anna-Maria Ortese Translated by Henry Martin Original title: A Count falls for a charming young reptile who lives on an island lost off the Portuguese coast. In its writing and (more...) Devil in the Hills [Buy Direct] [Part of The Modern Classics Set by Cesare Pavese Translated by D.D. Paige Original title: Diavolo sulle colline, La bella estate In The Devil in the Hills (more...)

60. Babelguides: The Babel Guide To Italian Literature
A set of nine printed Babel Guides. The Babel Guide to italian literature There is an embarrassment of riches in contemporary Italian letters;
http://www.babelguides.com/guides/ital
Your site for world literature in English translation home guides publishers authors ... contact :: Browse Books :: African Austrian Brazilian Chinese Dutch and Flemish Eastern European French German Hungarian Indian Italian Japanese Jewish Latin American Middle Eastern Portuguese Portuguese African Russian Scandinavian Slavic Spanish Yiddish You are at Home Guides Italian Guide SPECIALS 60% discount!
The complete Dalkey Archive translated collection: 70 books for $
Modern Classics
50 of Peter Owen's finest books for $
30% discount!
A set of nine printed Babel Guides
The Babel Guide to Italian Literature
There is an embarrassment of riches in contemporary Italian letters;
Italo Calvino, the divine Pasolini, Cesare Pavese, Natalia Ginzburg and Marta Morazzoni, not to mention Tondelli, Verga, Pirandello and Tabucchi... All, along with many others, presented here in the context of their translated novels and short stories. The first and highly acclaimed volume in the Babel Guides series.
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a lively and accessible introduction for English readers to contemporary Italian literature! All Books People Publishers Forum Posts Polls Users home authors translators publishers ... info@babelguides.com

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