Buona fortuna. Stelle, amuleti, sogni, navigazioni...
Title | Buona fortuna. Stelle, amuleti, sogni, navigazioni... PDF eBook |
Author | Carlo Nicotera |
Publisher | ElfridaIsmolliDigitalEdition |
Pages | 45 |
Release | 2012-07-21 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 8890730145 |
Pescara Tales (1902)
Title | Pescara Tales (1902) PDF eBook |
Author | Gabriele D'Annunzio |
Publisher | |
Pages | 260 |
Release | 2017-07 |
Genre | Italy |
ISBN | 9780987463784 |
The setting for his collection of eighteen stories by Gabriele D'Annunzio (1863-1938) was the Adriatic seaport of Pescara and its hinterland in the Italian region of Abruzzo, the author depicting events and personalities from the time of his youth, but also drawing from bygone incidents that were yet memorable in the area's folk history. Pescara may not have had the cachet of celebrated cities such as Venice or Florence, but sympathetically and wryly revealed here by the pen of one of Italy's great writers it lives and breathes with a vitality probably best compared to that of James Joyce's 'dear dirty Dublin'. Indeed Joyce, who admired D'Annunzio, may well have been inspired by the Italian's cameos of small-town life, his parade of saints, voluptuaries and reprobates, their repressions, obsessions, individual dissolutions, collective explosions of anarchy, and their aptness for bizarre behavior that extended from the catatonic to the manic. D'Annunzio came to recognize just how exotic his native region was after he had left it for Rome, where he worked for some years as a journalist and essay writer in the employ of various literary magazines. His Abruzzo articles, and especially those in which he records examples of extraordinary devotional behavior (akin to what Mark Twain was witnessing at that time on the banks of the Ganges), became the basis of the stories in this collection. D'Annunzio was a published poet at the age of sixteen, and his verse has never been absent from the Western Canon since. Something of his painterly style, the layered brushwork of his descriptions, the gorgeous romantic renderings of rural scenes and the moods of the sea, his celebrations of sensuality, his aesthete's fascination with all the possible bodily conditions, from the virginal-voluptuous to the decayed and moribund (he has been hailed as 'the body's poet'), will amaze and delight the reader even in the blandest and most dictionary-dependent translation. The present one is no such, however. Vladislav Zhukov is an experienced translator who has rendered works from four languages into English, including a substantial book of poetry, three volumes of short stories, and a novel (all available on Amazon.com). His knowledge of Italian is that of someone who acquired the language while living in Italy during his youth.
Shipwreck With Spectator
Title | Shipwreck With Spectator PDF eBook |
Author | Hans Blumenberg |
Publisher | MIT Press |
Pages | 148 |
Release | 1997 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9780262024112 |
This elegant essay exemplifies Blumenberg's ideas about the ability of the historical study of metaphor to illuminate essential aspects of being human. Originally published in the same year as his monumental Work on Myth, Shipwreck with Spectator traces the evolution of the complex of metaphors related to the sea, to shipwreck, and to the role of the spectator in human culture from ancient Greece to modern times. The sea is one of humanity's oldest metaphors for life, and a sea journey, Blumenberg observes, has often stood for our journey through life. We all know the role that shipwrecks can play in this journey, and at some level we have all played witness to others' wrecks, standing in safety and knowing that there is nothing we can do to help, yet fixed comfortably or uncomfortably in our ambiguous role as spectator. Through Blumenberg's seemingly inexhaustible knowledge of letters, from ancient texts through nineteenth-century reminiscences and modern speeches, we see layer upon layer revealed in the meanings humans have given to these metaphors; and in this way we begin to understand what metaphors can do that more straightforward modes of expression cannot. This edition of Shipwreck with Spectator also includes "Prospect for a Theory of Nonconceptuality", an essay that recounts the evolution of Blumenberg's ideas about metaphorology in the years following his early manifesto "Paradigms for a Metaphorology".
Chilly Scenes of Winter
Title | Chilly Scenes of Winter PDF eBook |
Author | Ann Beattie |
Publisher | Vintage |
Pages | 289 |
Release | 2011-05-18 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0307790754 |
This is the story of a love-smitten Charles; his friend Sam, the Phi Beta Kappa and former coat salesman; and Charles' mother, who spends a lot of time in the bathtub feeling depressed.
The Lisbon Earthquake
Title | The Lisbon Earthquake PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas Downing Kendrick |
Publisher | |
Pages | 282 |
Release | 1957 |
Genre | Earthquakes |
ISBN |
A Friday in August
Title | A Friday in August PDF eBook |
Author | Antonio D'Alfonso |
Publisher | Exile Editions, Ltd. |
Pages | 124 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9781550966398 |
A filmmaker who makes documentaries on hit-men, Fabrizio Notte is invited to show his latest piece, a work of fiction, at a film festival in Montreal. The reviews have been mixed and his family is in trouble. The trip to his hometown also serves as a pretext for an existential pilgrimage towards love and belonging. His search leads him, on a Friday in August, back through time, through this vast, moving landscape that is memory, to his first love and, ultimately, to himself.
Bound by Distance
Title | Bound by Distance PDF eBook |
Author | Pasquale Verdicchio |
Publisher | Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press |
Pages | 204 |
Release | 1997 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780838636831 |
Bound by Distance takes its place among a growing body of scholarship the goal of which is to challenge the kind of thinking that reproduces the "West" as a stable and homogenous political and discursive entity. The Italian nation, with its peculiar process of formation, the continuous tensions between its own northern and southern regions, and its history of emigration, provides an important case for complicating and reassessing concepts of national, racial, economic, and cultural dominance. The author analyzes the interactive space of the history of Italian state formation, Italian subaltern literature, Italian emigrant writing, and the current situation of North African and Asian immigrants to Italy, in order to contest the "feigned homogeneity" of the Italian nation and to complicate and reassess concepts of national, racial, economic, and cultural dominance.