Search results for "Propertiu"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Amor odit inertes (Ars 2, 229): Mobilità didascalica e staticità elegiaca

2005

Un'analisi della precettistica contenuta in Ars 2, 223-250 sulla 'dinamicità' dell'innamorato, letta come voluto rovesciamento, dall'interno, delle categorie spaziali elegiache The precepts of Ars 2, 223-250 on the lover's 'dynamic' attitude are read as a conscious reversal, from within, of the elegiac spatial cathegories.

Ars AmatoriastaticitàdynamicOvidiospaziospaceOvidio; Ars Amatoria; elegia latina; amore; spazio; dinamicità; staticità; Properzio; Tibullo; Ovid; Ars Amatoria; Latin elegy; love; space; dynamic; static; Propertius; TibullusOvidio Ars Amatoria elegia latina amore spazio dinamicità staticità Properzio TibulloSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura LatinaTibullusOvid Ars Amatoria Latin elegy love space dynamic static Propertius TibullusstaticProperzioamorePropertiusTibulloOvidLatin elegydinamicitàelegia latinalove
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Varcare i confini?: ‘Palinsesti didascalici’ nel terzo libro delle Elegie di Properzio

2020

Although it is objectively difficult to prepare a study on the relation- ships between Propertius’s elegies and the didactic poetry, a help- ful hint for the interpretation is given by the elegy 3, 5, in which the Umbrian poet expresses the desire to study, in his old age, the natu- ral phenomena, extending his study until the interpretation of the underworld. Indeed, in 13th and 22nd elegy of the 3rd book, which is the most experimental of the collection, Propertius will measure against the didactic poems written by Lucretius and Virgil, not cross- ing the boundaries of the genre of the elegy, but occasionally adopt- ing and re-elaborating in a original and explicit way, some elements from…

Propertius didactic poetry boundaries between elegy Lucretius and VergilSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura Latina
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Giovanni Marrasio fra Virgilio, Orazio e Properzio

2021

Questo saggio mira a presentare la figura e l’opera poetica di Giovanni Marrasio (Noto, 1400/1404 - Caltanissetta, sett. 1452), umanista siciliano autore dell’«Angelinetum» e dei «Carmina varia», attivo nella prima metà del sec. XV fra la Sicilia e Siena, Firenze e Padova, Ferrara e Napoli, in rapporti con altri umanisti e letterati (Giovanni Aurispa, Antonio Beccadelli, Leonardo Bruni, Enea Silvio Piccolomini, Carlo Marsuppini, Maffeo Vegio, Niccolò Niccoli, Guarino Veronese), potenti uomini di stato (Niccolò III d’Este, Alfonso il Magnanimo) e di chiesa (papa Niccolò V). In particolare, la disamina si concentra sulle suggestioni che Virgilio, Orazio e Properzio hanno esercitato sulla poes…

Settore L-FIL-LET/08 - Letteratura Latina Medievale E UmanisticaHoracePropertiuHumanistic ImitationLove PoetryGiovanni MarrasioVergilClassical TraditionSettore L-FIL-LET/13 - Filologia Della Letteratura Italiana
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Longa via. Rappresentazioni delle simbologie spaziali nell'elegia augustea

2006

My PhD Thesis scrutinized with the symbolic aspects of space in Latin Augustan love elegy and particularly with two main topics: urban space, related with 'urbanitas' as a cultural and literary model, and travel, often related to warfare and greed for money.

Space Latin elegy Propertius Tibullus OvidSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura Latina
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Un'appartenenza vulnerabile. Il sentimento della storia in Properzio

2021

The cultural heritage of mythical tales connected to real places in Rome is the core inspiration for the fourth book of Propertian elegies. But which features or attitudes lay the ground for the construction of collective memory? In this paper I will try to focus on how Propertius works on selection and removal of Roman history’s events and characters as early as in the first three books of Elegies: in the Propertian sense of history, the “belonging to” and the “distance from” the social frameworks of memory are re-examined by concepts as betrayal and vulnerability of thick relations tying together citizens, soldiers, friends.

Thick RelationsPropertiuRoman historyBetrayalVulnerabilitySettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura Latina
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