Words, Characters, and Context: Giovan Maria Cecchi and the Language of Theatre
Article | Contributor(s): Konrad Eisenbichler
With over sixty plays to his credit, the Florentine notary Giovan Maria Cecchi (1518–87) was the most prolific Italian dramatist of the entire Renaissance. Not surprisingly, his fellow Florentines nicknamed him il Comico (the playwright) not only because of his great productivity, but also...
Working for Justice in Food Systems on Stolen Land? Interrogating Food Movements Confronting Settler Colonialism
2025-03-19 22:03:18 | Article | Contributor(s): Michaela Bohunicky, Charles Levkoe, Nick Rose | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v8i2.452
The evolving practice and scholarship surrounding food movements aim to address social, political, economic and ecological crises in food systems. However, limited interrogation of settler colonialism remains a crucial gap. Settler colonialism is the ongoing process of invasion that works to...
Working It in and Working It out—Together: Centralized Infrastructure Project Management in the Humanities and Social Sciences
2023-07-24 18:11:15 | Presentation | Contributor(s): Constance Crompton | https://doi.org/10.25547/K1JE-FY84
critical infrastructure studies, scholarly communication, digital humanities
World of Dante
Article | Contributor(s): Brenda Deen Schildgen
This is a review of World of Dante.
World Shakespeare Bibliography
2023-05-11 18:55:44 | Article | Contributor(s): Louise Geddes
This is a review of the World Shakespeare Bibliography
Worshipful Gentlemen of England: The Studio of Padua and the Education of the English Gentry in the Sixteenth Century
Article | Contributor(s): Kenneth R. Bartlett
Writers and Religious Brotherhoods in Seventeenth-Century Madrid: The Congregation of the Slaves of the Santísimo Sacramento de la Magdalena
Article | Contributor(s): Elena Sánchez de Madariaga
This article examines the participation of writers and artists in the Congregation of the Slaves of the most Holy Sacrament of the Magdalene. It presents the major characteristics of the so-called esclavitudes or congregaciones of “slaves”, a type of religious brotherhood promoted by the court...
Writing in the Heavenly Language: A Guide To The Works Of David Joris
Article | Contributor(s): Gary K. Waite
Writing Martyrdom: Agrippa d'Aubigné's Reconstruction of Sixteenth-century Martyrology
Article | Contributor(s): Katherine S. Maynard
Cet article examine comment Agrippa d'Aubigné utilise l'Histoire des martyrs de Jean Crespin dans sa composition de deux textes martyrologiques, le premier étant son poème Les Tragiques, et le deuxième son Histoire universelle. Ces ouvrages révèlent dans une large mesure comment d'Aubigné a lu et...
Writing the Self / Writing about the Self: "Auteur" and "Autruy" in Tabourot Des Accords' Les Bigarrures
Article | Contributor(s): Catharine Randall Coats
Writing the Tragic Self: Richard II's Sad Stories
Article | Contributor(s): Paul Budra
When Shakespeare has Richard II call for the telling of "sad stories" he is not merely alluding to a tradition of medieval de casibus tragedy, but rather engaging with a well-known vision of historical teleology, popularized in Shakespeare's time by narrative historical tragedies. Shakespeare's...
Writing to Posterity: Margaret Cavendish’s “A True Relation of my Birth, Breeding and Life” (1656) as an “autobiographical relazione”
Article | Contributor(s): Margaret Reeves
L’essai autobiographique de Margaret Cavendish, intitulé A True Relation of my Birth, Breeding, and Life, et publié dans la première édition de Natures Pictures (1656), peut être lu comme une « relazione autobiographique ». Par la publication de cette brève autobiographie, dans les premières...
Written in Blood: Blood Devotion in Gianfrancesco Pico’s Staurostichon
Article | Contributor(s): Marco Piana
This article aims to provide an analysis of Gianfrancesco Pico della Mirandola’s hymn Staurostichon in view of other examples of Savonarolan blood devotion. Staurostichon describes a supernatural event that took place in Germany between 1501 and 1503, when unusual rainfalls started to mark...
Wroth, Lady Mary. Pamphilia to Amphilanthus in Manuscript and Print. Ed. Ilona Bell. Texts by Steven W. May and Ilona Bell.
Article | Contributor(s): Katharina Logan
Wroth, Mary, Jane Cavendish, and Elizabeth Brackley. Women’s Household Drama: Love’s Victorie, A Pastorall, and The concealed Fansyes. Ed. Marta Straznicky and Sara Mueller.
Article | Contributor(s): Mark Albert Johnston
XI Convegno della Società Canadese per gli Studi di Italianistica
Article | Contributor(s): Leonard G. Sbrocchi
XIV convegno della Società Canadese per gli Studi di Italianistica
Article | Contributor(s): Paul Colilli
Y-a-t-il un secret dans l’architecture du De asse?
Article | Contributor(s): Guy Lavoie
You Will Therefore Understand
Article | Contributor(s): Claudio Magris, Anne Milano Appel
Zack, Maria and Elaine Landry, eds. Research in the History and Philosophy of Mathematics: The CHSPM 2014 Annual Meeting in St. Catherine’s, Ontario
Article | Contributor(s): Fernando Q. Gouvêa
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