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157  Articles
1 of 17 pages  |  10  records  |  more records»
Petrarch’s sonnet »Se la mia vita da l’aspro tor-mento«, in which the poet is expressing the hope that advanced age will bring him the courage to admit to his lady his long suppressed feelings, is conceived as a single sentence. The three sixteenth-centur... see more

Petrarch’s sonnet »Se la mia vita da l’aspro tor-mento«, in which the poet is expressing the hope that advanced age will bring him the courage to admit to his lady his long suppressed feelings, is conceived as a single sentence. The three sixteenth-centur... see more

Whereas much of Machiavellian lyric opus reveals a character of “anti-Petrarchism,” the relationship between Machiavelli and Petrarch’s civil poetry is more complex and intricate. It is not by chance that Machiavelli selected Petrarch’s verses to close . ... see more

Art plays a fundamental role in Arthur Schopenhauer’s philosophical system, and among the many artists who Schopenhauer cites, Francis Petrarch may be considered the most significant. Schopenhauer includes Petrarch among his favorite authors, referring to... see more

The article discusses the benefits of having translations of Petrarch available in Japanese, and describes a project to digitize portions of a Japanese translation of the Canzoniere. Conversion from printed Japanese to HTML posed several interesting chal... see more

The colossal project of the Encyclopédie (1751-1772), directed by Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d’Alembert, aimed to create, as Voltaire contends, “a repository of all sciences and arts,” therefore establishing itself as the point of reference for litera... see more

The scholastic ambience of S’amor non è (Rvf 132) is not accidental; in it Petrarch demolishes the medieval cornerstone of knowledge by contradicting Aristotle’s law of non-contradiction. When Chaucer, however, translated the sonnet in the Troilus, he h... see more

English translation of Petrarch—translation that is also metamorphosis in a manner that Petrarch would have recognized—begins with Chaucer's rendition of canticus TroiliTroilus and Criseyde, an inaugural moment of lyric imitation long thought unique in Ch... see more

This article examines the theoretical premises and consequences of the renewed attention to the intersection between philology, hermeneutics, and criticism in humanist studies in general and in Petrarch studies in particular. The most recent philological ... see more

1 of 17 pages  |  10  records  |  more records»