We do not encounter many female characters in the 'Comedy', and this is particularly true of the first cantica, so it is significant that Francesca is, in the poem, the very first soul who speaks, just as it is significant that the first theme to be explored is courtly love. The aim of this article is to discuss Dante's reasons for choosing to explore the theme of courtly love from a female perspective, as this procedure is unusual in the literature of the times, as it is in Dante's case also
Love and Civitas: Dante’s Ethical Journey in the Vita Nuova Alfred Robert Crudale University of Con...
This thesis studies the ways in which female characters in Chaucer's poetry use language. Difference...
This study examines all the characterizations of the female personality in the Divine Comedy, includ...
Canto V of 'Inferno', in which Dante meets the souls of Paolo Malatesta and Francesca da Rimini, has...
If Francesca da Rimini is a lustful sinner in Hell, why is Dante at pains to elicit sympathy for her...
Whereas the courtly canzone frequently opens with a conventional address to ladies who then disappea...
In the first Book of the Convivio, Dante names women among the readers of his text, which include “n...
While we are accustomed to Dante's appropriations ad revisions of history, the case of Francesca da ...
This study examines the ways that Dante uses concepts of the masculine in his early work to offer an...
This thesis explores the characterizations of women in Dante’s Divine Comedy and uses this informati...
The De Vulgari Eloquentia is a study of the vernacular language, its origin and its literary manifes...
In the work of male poets, the love for a woman is often a pretext for the elaboration of their text...
"In literature, the usual course of the othering process of a female character is for her image, as ...
This dissertation examines Dante’s love for Beatrice, which begins as erotic passion accompanied by ...
This thesis concerns the role that women play as inspirers and interpreters for male heroes in poetr...
Love and Civitas: Dante’s Ethical Journey in the Vita Nuova Alfred Robert Crudale University of Con...
This thesis studies the ways in which female characters in Chaucer's poetry use language. Difference...
This study examines all the characterizations of the female personality in the Divine Comedy, includ...
Canto V of 'Inferno', in which Dante meets the souls of Paolo Malatesta and Francesca da Rimini, has...
If Francesca da Rimini is a lustful sinner in Hell, why is Dante at pains to elicit sympathy for her...
Whereas the courtly canzone frequently opens with a conventional address to ladies who then disappea...
In the first Book of the Convivio, Dante names women among the readers of his text, which include “n...
While we are accustomed to Dante's appropriations ad revisions of history, the case of Francesca da ...
This study examines the ways that Dante uses concepts of the masculine in his early work to offer an...
This thesis explores the characterizations of women in Dante’s Divine Comedy and uses this informati...
The De Vulgari Eloquentia is a study of the vernacular language, its origin and its literary manifes...
In the work of male poets, the love for a woman is often a pretext for the elaboration of their text...
"In literature, the usual course of the othering process of a female character is for her image, as ...
This dissertation examines Dante’s love for Beatrice, which begins as erotic passion accompanied by ...
This thesis concerns the role that women play as inspirers and interpreters for male heroes in poetr...
Love and Civitas: Dante’s Ethical Journey in the Vita Nuova Alfred Robert Crudale University of Con...
This thesis studies the ways in which female characters in Chaucer's poetry use language. Difference...
This study examines all the characterizations of the female personality in the Divine Comedy, includ...