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dante fugazzotto death: Saints & Sinners Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, McMullen Museum of Art, 1999 This exhibition at Boston College's McMullen Museum of Art (February-May 1999) takes an interdisciplinary approach to studying the style, subject matter, and functions of religious art in Italy between 1580-1680. The conceptual centerpiece of the exhibition is Caravaggio's recently rediscovered The Taking of Christ. The catalogue reproduces in color all of the paintings in the exhibition and includes a collection of essays that analyze how some of the period's most important artistic, religious, and social concerns are encapsulated within the various images. Contributors include Franco Mormando (Exhibition Organizer and Catalogue Editor), Gauvin Bailey, Noel Barber, Sergio Benedetti, Pamela Jones, John W. O'Malley, John Varriano, Josephine von Henneberg, and Thomas Worcester. |
dante fugazzotto death: A First Book in Latin Hiram Tuell, 1903 |
dante fugazzotto death: Father Arseny , 2001 The stories of Father Arseny and his work in the Soviet prison camps have captured the minds and hearts of readers all over the world. In this second volume readers will find additional narratives about Father Arseny newly translated from the most recent Russian edition.--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
dante fugazzotto death: Neapolitan Postcards Goffredo Plastino, Joseph Sciorra, 2016-06-22 Neapolitan Postcards gathers a diverse group of international scholars to investigate unexplored transnational aspects of the intimate yet globally popular canzone napoletana. Performed and beloved worldwide in almost every language, the style had hits such as “Funiculì funiculà” (1880) and “’O sole mio” (1898) which sold millions of copies. These hits fueled the tradition’s spread across the world over the course of the twentieth century with the eventual popularity of covers by singers and musicians of all music genres and styles, from popular music to opera and jazz. This book is the first scholarly work that considers the specific complexities of the international Neapolitan Song scenes through case studies from Argentina, England, Greece, and the United States, employing analyses of compositions, iconographical sources, international films, mechanical musical instruments, performances, and recordings devoted to the canzone napoletana. |
dante fugazzotto death: Dead Six Larry Correia, Mike Kupari, 2011-10-01 Michael Valentine, veteran and former member of an elite private military company, has been recruited by the government to conduct a secret counter-terror operation in the Persian Gulf nation of Zubara. The unit is called Dead Six. Their mission is to take the fight to the enemy and not get caught. Lorenzo, assassin and thief extraordinaire, is being blackmailed by the world's most vicious crime lord. His team has to infiltrate the Zubaran terrorist network and pull off an impossible heist or his family will die. When Dead Six compromises his objective, Lorenzo has a new job: Find and kill Valentine. As allegiances are betrayed and the nation descends into a bloody civil war, Lorenzo and Valentine must face off. Two men. Two missions. Only one will win. At the publisher's request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management). |
dante fugazzotto death: Fundamentals of Esthetic Implant Dentistry Abdelsalam Elaskary, 2008-04-15 Esthetic dentistry and implant dentistry continue to grow in patient demand and professional popularity. More now than ever, clinicians are faced with the need to combine form with function, art with science. The considerable scientific and technical leaps that have been made in this field mean that this goal is now more achievable, and Fundamentals of Esthetic Implant Dentistry seeks to share these advances with practitioners and students alike. |
dante fugazzotto death: 1630-1632 Scotland. Privy Council, 1902 |
dante fugazzotto death: Within the Lighted City Lisa Lenzo, 1997 A collection of interwoven stories set in Detroit. The story, Burning, is on the 1967 race riot, in Self-Defense, a white girl is attacked by black students, and Sophie's Shirt is a mother's grief at the loss of a baby. |
dante fugazzotto death: Italy Revisited Mary Melfi, 2009 Drawing out her mother's childhood memories of life in southern Italy at the dawn of the twentieth century, Mary Melfi takes an unconventional approach to autobiographical writing. Italy Revisited serves as a double memoir, told in dialogue between a mother and a daughter. The conversation takes the reader to a medieval town high up in the mountains where time is told by the shadow the sun casts, where wheat and olive oil are the currency of choice (barter is in use), and where marriage is as much about property as it is about love. As they re-create that vanished world, the pair finds greater understanding of the tumultuous relationships that sometimes exist between immigrant mothers and their children. |
dante fugazzotto death: Laser Streak David Musser, Kenneth Musser, 1998-08 |
dante fugazzotto death: Lacquer: Technology and Conservation Marianne Webb, 2000-04-13 This reference tool covers the technology and methods of treatment for both types of lacquer and assesses current practices. It describes production technology and decorative techniques and discusses the materials used in Asian lacquer. |
dante fugazzotto death: The Proud Italians Carl Pescosolido, Pamela Gleason, 1995 |
dante fugazzotto death: The Cardinal of Lorraine and the Council of Trent H. Outram Evennett, 2011-06-30 This 1930 volume maintains that the first two and a half years of the pontificate of Pius IV, during which the continuation of the Council of Trent was secured against strong French and German opposition, constituted the critical period which finally determined the ultimate orientation of the Counter-Reformation. |
dante fugazzotto death: The Spiritual Combat Lorenzo Scupoli, 1868 |
dante fugazzotto death: Military Life in Italy Edmondo De Amicis, 1882 |
dante fugazzotto death: Caravaggio and His Followers in the National Gallery of Ireland Sergio Benedetti, Colin Wiggins, National Gallery of Ireland, 1992 |
dante fugazzotto death: Aivazovsky Ivan Konstantinovich Aĭvazovskiĭ, 1980 |
dante fugazzotto death: Duologue Antonio D'Alfonso, Pasquale Verdicchio, 1998 Literary Criticism. Cultural Studies. In San Diego, California, between June 15 and June 17, 1996, two writers sit before a microphone and exchange ideas on a number of burning issues with which they have both had to contend for over twenty years. Literature, the politics of publishing, identity, culture, post-emigrant culture, ethnicity, pluriculturalism, Americanism, Canadianism, nationalism, the use of writers' associations: these are some of the themes that Antonio D'Alfonso and Pasquale Verdicchio tackle in this casual yet intense duologue. Antonio D'Alfonso has published over a dozen books and works as an editor and publisher, and Pasquale Verdicchio is the author of a dozen books and is head of the Writing Program in the Department of Literature at the University of California, San Diego. |
dante fugazzotto death: Transported by Song Caroline Bithell, 2007-05-25 This book is an ethnomusicological investigation into traditional and contemporary music in Corsica, with a critical analysis of associated theoretical and ideological issues, focusing particularly on the evolution of musical activity and discourse since 1970. |
dante fugazzotto death: Contrasts Joseph Pivato, 1991 This historic collection, the first of its kind, is devoted to the discussion of Italian-Canadian writers publishing in English, in French or in Italian. These critical essays include analyses of some important writing: F.G. Paci's Black Madonna, the poetry of Mary di Michele and Pier Giorgio Di Cicco, the plays of Marco Micone, Gens du Silence and Addolorata, the novels of Maria Ardizzi and many other titles. The ten contributors make significant additions to the study of Canadian literature: D.C. Minni examines the short story; Alexandre Amprimoz and Sante Viselli consider Italian-Canadian poetry; Roberta Sciff-Zamaro analyses Black Madonna; Robert Billings fathoms di Michels's verse; Frank Paci considers the task of the novelist. Fulvio Caccia's essay on the literary languages of Quebec is controversial as are Filippo Salvatore's arguments on the writer and politics. Antonio D'Alfonso speculates on future developments among the more than one hundred Italian-Canadian writers. In addition to editing the collection, Joseph Pivato introduces the volume with a long essay on ethnic history and literary criticism in Canada, includes another essay on Italian-language writers and concludes with a detailed bibliography and an index. |
dante fugazzotto death: Pillars of Lace Marisa De Franceschi, 1998 Pillars of Lace is an eclectic collection of the finest writing by Italian-Canadian women. It is the first anthology of its kind in Canada. This anthology showcases excerpts of a variety of writing styles: poetry, short stories, film scripts, novels, personal memoirs, and journalism. Pillars of Lace is the perfect starting point for an introduction to and a taste of Italian-Canadian women writers. The material previously published or written in French or Italian has been translated into English. Many established, award-winning writers are represented: Maris Ardizzi, Angela Baldassarre, Carole David, Fiorells De Luca Calce, Isabella Colalillo-Katz, Mary di Michele, Caterina Edwards, Anna Foschi, Darlene Madott, Mary Melfi, Gianna Patriarca, Panny Petrone, Liliane Welch, Bianca Zagolin, Carmen Laurenza-Ziolkowski, and other recently and unpublished writers. |
dante fugazzotto death: Tenor of Love Mary di Michele, 2007-11-01 A NOVEL OF PASSION AND BETRAYAL, ART AND AMBITION BASED ON THE LIFE OF ONE OF THE GREATEST OPERA SINGERS OF ALL TIME One summer day in 1897, a young singer, Enrico Caruso, arrives at the home of the Giachetti family. He has come to Livorno to sing on the summer stage with Ada Giachetti, a famous and beautiful soprano. Ada's mother offers him a spare room, and before Ada herself has a chance to meet the unknown tenor, her younger sister, Rina, arrives home from the market and falls fatefully in love. With the help of singing lessons from Ada, Caruso wins the leading role in Puccini's new opera La Bohème. Although Caruso loves Rina, it is Ada he adores, and they soon become lovers. Heartbroken, Rina becomes an opera singer too, hoping to take her sister's place. For decades, the two sisters are locked in a struggle to be the star on Caruso's stage and in his bed, while Caruso's voice grows more and more unimaginably beautiful. But as his relations with the two sisters break down in scandal and tragedy, the now world-famous Caruso builds a new life for himself as the star of the Metropolitan Opera in New York. There, far from the drama and passion of Caruso's Tuscan life, a shy young American woman will win his heart and, taking the greatest leap of faith of all, supplant Ada and Rina as his one true love. |
dante fugazzotto death: Made in Italy Franco Fabbri, Goffredo Plastino, 2013-10-30 Provides comprehensive introduction to the history, sociology and musicology of 20th century Italian popular music Essays written by authors from a variety of backgrounds offer broad portrait of modern popular musical culture for readers new to Italian music |
dante fugazzotto death: The Jesuits John W. O'Malley, Gauvin Alexander Bailey, Steven J. Harris, T. Frank Kennedy, 1999-01-01 An astounding history of the accomplishments of the Society of Jesus, from painting and poetry to cartography and physics, from Europe to New France to China. |
dante fugazzotto death: The Anthology of Italian-Canadian Writing Joseph Pivato, 1998 The more than fifty authors represented come from across Canada and have backgrounds in all regions of Italy. |
dante fugazzotto death: National Airs Thomas Moore, 1860 |
dante fugazzotto death: Geographies of Modernism Peter Brooker, Andrew Thacker, 2007-05-07 One of the most pivotal developments in contemporary literary and cultural studies is the investigation of space and geography, a trend which is proving particularly important for modernist studies. This volume explores the interface between modernism and geography in a range of writers, texts and artists across the twentieth century. Cross-disciplinary essays test and extend a variety of methodological approaches and reveal the reach of this topic into every corner of modernist scholarship. From Imagist poetry and the Orient to teashops and modernism in London, or from mapping and belonging in James Joyce or Joseph Conrad to the space of new media artists, this remarkable volume offers fresh, invigorating research that ranges across the field of modernism. It also serves to identify the many exciting new directions that future studies may take. With groundbreaking essays from an international team of highly-regarded scholars, Geographies of Modernism is an important step forward in literary and cultural studies. |
dante fugazzotto death: Echo Joseph Pivato, 1994 This collection of essays explores the literature of Italian immigrants in Canada and as well as the work of their children by focusing on the central role themes of migration play in their work. Addressing topics such as the oral roots of Canadian immigrant writing, the changing place of women in works of the Italian Diaspora, and the persistent difficulties of translation, this work provides an international perspective on some of the most pressing questions in study of literature today. In addition to Canadian works, immigrant writing from in Australia and other countries is also considered, producing nuanced observations into the importance of cultural differences and affinities. |
dante fugazzotto death: The Spirit of the Counter-Reformation H. Outram Evennett, 1991-02 Outram Evennett was a university lecturer in history at Cambridge and a Fellow of Trinity College. This book, based on his Birkbeck Lectures of 1951, represents some twenty years' work on the sources of the Counter-Reformation. Evennett did not live to complete his task, but he has provided a remarkable synthesis of the vast European literature on this subject. His method was to isolate the special and positive characteristics of the Counter-Reformation and to account for them in relation to the environment in which they developed. This approach is highly original; it sees in the spirit of the Counter-Reformation an attempt not to check but to extend and come to terms with the more individualistic and modern environment in which the Catholic Church found itself. The Jesuits are treated as agents of this change. Dr John Bossy has edited these lectures for publication and added a Postscript, analysing some of the problems raised in the years since the lectures were delivered. Professor David Knowles pays tribute to Evennett's memory in a Foreword. |
dante fugazzotto death: Baroque Art Fordham University, 1972 |
dante fugazzotto death: Albanian Urban Lyric Song in the 1930s Eno Koço, 2004 The author examines the indigenous diatonic and chromatic modes used in Albanian urban music and classifies them under traditional headings and as part of a newly established grouping, here termed south-western Balkan modes. The core of the work is the analysis of Albanian urban lyric songs, seen as an artistic version of the traditional Albanian urban songs. |
dante fugazzotto death: Balkan Refrain Dimitrije Golemovic, 2010 Balkan Refrain studies various aspects of the refrain, such as its origin, development, forms, and use in traditional and popular music. It attempts to establish what refrain actually is and how it can be defined in folk and scholarly practice based on musical examples from Serbia, Montenegro, and the Republic of Srpska, with the aim of finding general rules applicable to refrains in the songs of other nations. The refrain is observed from musical and linguistic perspectives, as well as its religious, social, and economical uses. The book includes an audio CD featuring traditional folk songs as well as some examples of newly composed folk songs. |
dante fugazzotto death: The Age of Rubens , 1993 |
dante fugazzotto death: Empire of Song Dafni Tragaki, 2013 The Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) is more than a musical event that ostensibly unites European people through music. It is a spectacle and performative event, one that allegorically represents the idea of Europe. In Empire of Song: Europe and Nation in the Eurovision Song Contest, contributors interpret the ESC as a musical mediascape and mega-event that has variously performed and performs the changing visions of the European project. Through the study of the cultural politics of the ESC, essayists discuss the ways in which music operates as a dynamic nexus for making national identities and European sensibilities, generating processes of 'assimilation' or 'integration, ' and defining the celebrated notion of the 'European citizen' in a global context. |
dante fugazzotto death: Dante's Dream on the Day of the Death of Beatrice Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1881 |
dante fugazzotto death: Valley of the Dead Kim Paffenroth, 2010-03-13 Using Dante’s Inferno to draw out the reality behind the fantasy, author Kim Paffenroth tells the true events… During his lost wanderings, Dante came upon an infestation of the living dead. The unspeakable acts he witnessed —cannibalism, live burnings, evisceration, crucifixion, and dozens more—became the basis of all the horrors described in Inferno. At last, the real story can be told. |
Dante Alighieri Biography - eNotes.com
Dante Alighieri Biography. D ante Alighieri took the world to hell and back. The thirteenth-century poet’s most enduring work, The Divine Comedy, is an epic, three-volume journey through hell ...
The Divine Comedy Summary - eNotes.com
The Divine Comedy is an epic poem by Dante Alighieri in the early 14th century. It consists of three parts: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. The poem follows Dante's journey through the ...
Dante's Inferno Summary - eNotes.com
Dante's work is called Divine Comedy when there isn't a hint of comedy in it because Dante is using a different definition of comedy from how the term is commonly understood. In the …
Dante's Inferno History of the Text - eNotes.com
Dante was a devout Catholic, and The Divine Comedy is an expression of his religious ardor, unfolding across the three levels of the afterlife laid out by Catholic doctrine: Inferno, Purgatorio ...
Dante's Inferno Chapter Summaries - eNotes.com
Dante, now middle-aged and halfway through the journey of life, falls into a waking slumber and loses his path. When he awakens on the night of Maundy Thursday—a Holy Day celebrating …
The New Life Summary - eNotes.com
Dante's affection for Beatrice transcends ordinary romantic conventions. It is an ethereal connection, first sparked when Dante was just nine and Beatrice eight.
What advice does Virgil give Dante at the gate of Hell in Dante's ...
Dec 7, 2023 · In Dante's classic, The Divine Comedy, there are three parts to the entire work: Inferno, Purgatory and Paradise. The question at hand is answered in Inferno, Canto 3. As …
Dante's Inferno Characters - eNotes.com
Dante, the epic’s central character, embarks on a spiritual quest after erring in life. Dante is also the author of Inferno. Virgil is an ancient Roman poet who guides Dante through the circles ...
Dante's Inferno Analysis - eNotes.com
Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy is a profoundly structured epic poem that intricately intertwines form, allusion, and allegory to explore the themes of morality, redemption, and the afterlife ...
Who are the ferrymen and which rivers do they operate on in …
Dec 7, 2023 · The river Dante crosses is called the Acheron, one of the five rivers of the ancient Greek underworld; while the Acheron is a real river in northwestern Greece, here it is …
Dante Alighieri Biography - eNotes.com
Dante Alighieri Biography. D ante Alighieri took the world to hell and back. The thirteenth-century poet’s most enduring work, The Divine Comedy, is an epic, three-volume journey through hell ...
The Divine Comedy Summary - eNotes.com
The Divine Comedy is an epic poem by Dante Alighieri in the early 14th century. It consists of three parts: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. The poem follows Dante's journey through the ...
Dante's Inferno Summary - eNotes.com
Dante's work is called Divine Comedy when there isn't a hint of comedy in it because Dante is using a different definition of comedy from how the term is commonly understood. In the …
Dante's Inferno History of the Text - eNotes.com
Dante was a devout Catholic, and The Divine Comedy is an expression of his religious ardor, unfolding across the three levels of the afterlife laid out by Catholic doctrine: Inferno, …
Dante's Inferno Chapter Summaries - eNotes.com
Dante, now middle-aged and halfway through the journey of life, falls into a waking slumber and loses his path. When he awakens on the night of Maundy Thursday—a Holy Day celebrating …
The New Life Summary - eNotes.com
Dante's affection for Beatrice transcends ordinary romantic conventions. It is an ethereal connection, first sparked when Dante was just nine and Beatrice eight.
What advice does Virgil give Dante at the gate of Hell in Dante's ...
Dec 7, 2023 · In Dante's classic, The Divine Comedy, there are three parts to the entire work: Inferno, Purgatory and Paradise. The question at hand is answered in Inferno, Canto 3. As …
Dante's Inferno Characters - eNotes.com
Dante, the epic’s central character, embarks on a spiritual quest after erring in life. Dante is also the author of Inferno. Virgil is an ancient Roman poet who guides Dante through the circles ...
Dante's Inferno Analysis - eNotes.com
Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy is a profoundly structured epic poem that intricately intertwines form, allusion, and allegory to explore the themes of morality, redemption, and the afterlife ...
Who are the ferrymen and which rivers do they operate on in …
Dec 7, 2023 · The river Dante crosses is called the Acheron, one of the five rivers of the ancient Greek underworld; while the Acheron is a real river in northwestern Greece, here it is …