OAR@UM Collection:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/126968
2025-12-28T02:00:19ZJournal of Anglo-Italian Studies : volume 8
/library/oar/handle/123456789/136089
Title: Journal of Anglo-Italian Studies : volume 8
Authors: Vassallo, Peter
Abstract: Table of Contents:; - From Leon Battista Alberti to Jane Austen via Giacomo Leoni and BBC Drama: John Woodhouse; - Absence, Desire and the Female Other in Petrarch and Wyatt: Gloria Lauri Lucente; - Mary Shelley, Anglo-Italicus: Female Self-Assertion and the Politics of Distinction: Maria Schoina; - Presence and Absence in Byron's The Prophecy of Dante: Valeria Tinkler-Villani; - Enchantment and Disenchantment: English Romantic Visions of Italy: Manfred Pfister; - 'A Freak of Freedom:' British travellers to the Republic of San Marino: Maurizio Ascari; - Leigh Hunt in Italy 1822-1825: Nicholas Roe; - 'Walking in the footsteps of the Illustrious Dead:' Nineteenth-century Travellers in Southern Italy: Sharon Ouditt; - Authenticating Italy: Poetry, Tourism and Browning's The Ring and the Book: Christopher M. Keirstead; - 'A real picture of natural and feminine feeling?' Anna Jameson's Diary of an Ennuyee: Kate Walchester; - 'Fashioned from His Opposite:' Yeats, Dante and Shelley: Michael O'Neill; - D. H. Lawrence and the Sicilian myth of Persephone: Peter Vassallo; - Angels and Vagabonds: Breaking through Barriers in the Anglo-Italian Encounter: Sally Collins; - 'Dark juxtaposition' - D. H. Lawrence, Verga and Cultural Difference: Michael Cronin; - Writing the familial past: historical and personal memoir in Sicily and England: Political and Social Reminiscences, 1848-1870 by Tina Scalia Whitaker: Giorgia Alu; - The Romance of Anglo-Italian Studies: Brief Fictions of Francesco Marroni: Allan C. Christensen2006-01-01T00:00:00ZFrom Leon Battista Alberti to Jane Austen via Giacomo Leoni and BBC drama
/library/oar/handle/123456789/129278
Title: From Leon Battista Alberti to Jane Austen via Giacomo Leoni and BBC drama
Authors: Woodhouse, John
Abstract: Despite the exalted presence in the title of the names of Leon
Battista Alberti and Jane Austen, the present paper is fundamentally a
plea for greater recognition of the talents and achievements of Giacomo
Leoni (1686-1746), as editor of the great Italian humanist, Leon Battista
Alberti, as an architect in his own right and as a proselytiser of AngloPalladian
architecture. Leoni's English edition of Alberti's great
Renaissance treatise On Architecture (1726-29) endured for two and a
half centuries, and even now has a strong presence in the only other
translation done since that date, Joseph Rykwert's edition of 1988. Leoni
helped create and consolidate a taste for Palladian or Anglo-Palladian
architecture in England through that edition of Alberti, and through his
earlier publication of Andrea Palladio's The Four Books of Architecture
(1715-20).2006-01-01T00:00:00ZAbsence, desire and the female other in Petrarch and Wyatt
/library/oar/handle/123456789/129277
Title: Absence, desire and the female other in Petrarch and Wyatt
Authors: Lauri Lucente, Gloria
Abstract: 'Absence gives rise to desire and desire gives rise to the poet's
song, but desire itself is never to be fulfilled, never to secure its object.'
This thematized model of the origins of the lyric tradition lies at the
heart of Francis Petrarch's formulation of the paradigmatic Western idiom
of desire as expressed in his Canzoniere. In what follows, I will be
focusing on such a formulation and on its appropriation and
transformation by Sir Thomas Wyatt, particularly as exemplified in his
poems They flee from me and Whoso list to hunt. In examining the
interplay between absence and desire, I will attempt to recover the muted
voice of the displaced and objectified female figure in both Petrarch's
and Wyatt's verse. While acknowledging the appeal of the recovery of
the female muted voice in male-authored texts, especially the feminist
appropriation, the underlying danger of creating a presence or plenitude
which never really existed in the first place will also be considered. The
female figure in Petrarch's Canzoniere and in Wyatt's body of verse is,
after all, a masculine construct that tells us less about female desire and
more about male fantasy.2006-01-01T00:00:00ZMary Shelley, ππ―π¨ππ°-ππ΅π’ππͺπ€πΆπ΄ : female self-assertion and the politics of distinction
/library/oar/handle/123456789/129276
Title: Mary Shelley, ππ―π¨ππ°-ππ΅π’ππͺπ€πΆπ΄ : female self-assertion and the politics of distinction
Authors: Schoina, Maria
Abstract: Written in Genoa a few months after Percy Shelley's death, Mary
Shelley's mourning poem The Choice records the speaker's dejection
and bereaved condition caused by the tragic loss of her husband and two
children while in Italy: 'Here let me cling, here to these solitudes, /These
myrtle shaded streams and chestnut woods; I Tear me not hence - here
let me live & die,/ In my adopted land, my country, Italy!' The Choice,
unsurprisingly, depicts Italy in contradictory and often confusing colours.
On the one hand, the country assumes a soothing, almost therapeutic
role, on account of the happy memories it evokes, of its natural setting
and stimulating environment. On the other hand, Italy looms as an
implacable accomplice to the domestic misfortunes and sad destiny which
beset the speaker. Italy is cast simultaneously as 'murdress' and healer.2006-01-01T00:00:00Z