A Companion to the Classical TraditionCraig W. Kallendorf John Wiley & Sons, 2008 M04 15 - 512 páginas A Companion to the Classical Tradition accommodates the pressing need for an up-to-date introduction and overview of the growing field of reception studies.
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Página xiv
... Theory (Copenhagen 1980) and the editor of A History of Nordic Neo-Latin Literature (Odense 1995). Friendship and Poetry: Studies in Danish Neo-Latin Literature, ed. M. Pade, K. SkovgaardPetersen, & P. Zeeberg (Copenhagen, 2004), was ...
... Theory (Copenhagen 1980) and the editor of A History of Nordic Neo-Latin Literature (Odense 1995). Friendship and Poetry: Studies in Danish Neo-Latin Literature, ed. M. Pade, K. SkovgaardPetersen, & P. Zeeberg (Copenhagen, 2004), was ...
Página 2
... theory revolution'' in most areas of the humanities, and this field is no exception. As Charles Martindale shows, a key innovation derives from the development of reception theory, especially as practiced since the 1960s at the ...
... theory revolution'' in most areas of the humanities, and this field is no exception. As Charles Martindale shows, a key innovation derives from the development of reception theory, especially as practiced since the 1960s at the ...
Página 8
... theories of the Middle Ages and the new learning of the Renaissance (Law 2003) to the flowering of comparative philology in the nineteenth century (Davies 1998). What does need to be stressed is the link between the formal structure of ...
... theories of the Middle Ages and the new learning of the Renaissance (Law 2003) to the flowering of comparative philology in the nineteenth century (Davies 1998). What does need to be stressed is the link between the formal structure of ...
Página 32
... theory at least more classical authors were read with greater historical sensitivity in the Renaissance than in the Middle Ages (Waquet 2001: 7–40). What is more, Greek, which had largely disappeared in western Europe during the Middle ...
... theory at least more classical authors were read with greater historical sensitivity in the Renaissance than in the Middle Ages (Waquet 2001: 7–40). What is more, Greek, which had largely disappeared in western Europe during the Middle ...
Página 58
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