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  1. Performing Anatomy

    Performing Anatomy

    Contributor(s): Ronald Huebert

    Peut-on dire qu’il y avait quelque chose de véritablement théâtral dans les événements ayant eu lieu dans les soi-disant théâtres de l’anatomie de la Renaissance ? À cette question, je propose quatre réponses, différentes mais liées, basées sur les archives étudiées par de précédents spécialistes...

  2. Permanent Human Characteristics According to the Romantics and to Manzoni
  3. Perona, Blandine et Tristan Vigliano, éds. Érasme et la France
  4. Persistenza e cambiamento nei Viceré di Federico De Roberto
  5. Persson, Fabian. Women at the Early Modern Swedish Court: Power, Risk, and Opportunity.
  6. Petersen, Suzanne H., project dir. Pan-Hispanic Ballad Project. Other.
  7. Petits commerces de bouche et réseaux alimentaires alternatifs: un regard montréalais

    Petits commerces de bouche et réseaux alimentaires alternatifs: un regard montréalais

    2025-03-19 22:03:43 | Contributor(s): Alexandre Maltais | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v4i1.189

    Cet article aborde les réseaux de distribution alimentaire alternatifs par une de leur leurs extrémités jusqu’ici négligée dans la littérature comme dans le débat public, les petits commerces de détail urbains. Ceux-ci se multiplient sur plusieurs rues commerçantes dans les grandes villes...

  8. Petrarch's "Conversion" on Mont Ventoux and the Patterns of Religious Experience

    Petrarch's "Conversion" on Mont Ventoux and the Patterns of Religious Experience

    Contributor(s): Donald Beecher

    Pétrarque était passionné par le récit que fait saint Augustin de sa conversion. Il a donc cherché tout au long de sa vie à réaliser cette expérience pour lui-même tout en la rendant significative dans le contexte humaniste chrétien. Sa lettre concernant son expérience spirituelle lors de son...

  9. Petrarch's Liber sine nomine and a Vision of Rome in the Reformation
  10. Petrarch's Rerum Vulgarium Fragmenta: Mourning Laura

    Petrarch's Rerum Vulgarium Fragmenta: Mourning Laura

    Contributor(s): Isabella Bertoletti

  11. Petrarch’s Fragmenta: The Narrative and Theological Unity of Rerum vulgarium fragmenta
  12. Phaeton’s Flight, Adonis’s Trial, and Minerva in the House of Envy: 
Lodovico Dolce between Ovid and Ariosto

    Phaeton’s Flight, Adonis’s Trial, and Minerva in the House of Envy: 
Lodovico Dolce between Ovid and Ariosto

    Contributor(s): Andrea Torre

    Introducing Thyeste: Tragedia da Seneca (1547), the Venetian writer Lodovico Dolce (1508–68) defines the art of translating a book as an experience that lives in the “perspective of the becoming [...] because in order to translate, it is necessary for us to take another language or (if possible)...

  13. Photography and the Concept of Return: A Personal View

    Photography and the Concept of Return: A Personal View

    Contributor(s): Vincenzo Pietropaolo

    As a photographer of the immigrant experience, the yearning for return to a homeland has been a central theme of my research. In this paper, I explore both my personal and collective experience of displacement and uprooting (Not Paved with Gold), the annual return to Canada of temporary migrant...

  14. Piagnone Exemplarity and the Florentine Literary Canon in the Vita di Girolamo Benivieni
  15. Pic de la Mirandole et son mythe, tels que vus par William G. Craven
  16. Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni. Lettere: Edizione critica. Ed. Francesco Borghesi
  17. Picturing Annie's Egypt. Terra di Cleopatra by Annie Vivanti

    Picturing Annie's Egypt. Terra di Cleopatra by Annie Vivanti

    Contributor(s): Anne Urbancic

    Her readers would not have found the Egyptian adventure portrayed in Terra di Cleopatra to have been too unusual or exotic for Annie Vivanti, a world traveller who had already described countless foreign locales and adventures in previous works. Some of these were presented as fiction; others...

  18. Piercing Proverbial Crows’ Eyes: Theft and Publication in Renaissance France

    Piercing Proverbial Crows’ Eyes: Theft and Publication in Renaissance France

    Contributor(s): Emma Herdman

    The ironic Latin proverb “cornicum oculos configere” was classically illustrated by the example of Gnaeus Flavius, celebrated for his theft and valuable but unauthorized publication of Rome’s legal secrets. Erasmus’s discussion of the proverb in the Adages consequently focuses on the tension...

  19. Piero Garofalo, Elizabeth Leake and Dana Renga. Internal exile in Fascist Italy. History and representation of confino
  20. Pietro Aretino's Orazia: A Bibliographical Essay

    Pietro Aretino's Orazia: A Bibliographical Essay

    Contributor(s): Michael Lettieri