Among the most complex and engaging artifacts of early modern Italian culture, Ludovico Ariosto’s Orlando furioso, first published in 1516 and twice revised before its definitive edition in 1532, emerged from a world that was rapidly expanding on a number of fronts while simultaneously subject to a disastrous breakdown of political, social, and religious certainties. Taking inspiration from the celebrated poem by Jorge Luis Borges, “Ariosto y los Arabes” (1960), this interdisciplinary conference will focus on the role of the Muslim world as the essential ‘other’ in Ariosto’s text. Our aim is to investigate the composite political, religious, and linguistic landscape as well as the relational systems that might be reconstructed around the Fu...
This contribution returns to the question of the vulgar sources of Ariosto, proposing to analyze a C...
First best seller of Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto was printed at Ferr...
In Ludovico Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso (1516, 1521, 1532), Charlemagne is mentioned in the very first...
This article, the result of original research in the field of Mediterranean culture during the Middl...
Canto XXIII marks a tragicomic turning point in the Orlando Furioso, as the tension sustaining the t...
One of the best known works in Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso, is a continuation of the rom...
Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto, as one of the most eminent works of the European Renaissance, a...
This lecture focuses on three main aspects concerning the 26th canto of the Orlando furioso: interte...
This study investigates the representation of Saracens in Boiardo's Inamoramento de Orlando and Ario...
Spine title: Ariosto & Boiardo.Includes index.Bibliography: pages 215-244.In remarkably intensified ...
È risaputo che un persistente motivo di inquietudine trascorra le ottave dell’Orlando furioso, pur s...
La presente tesis defiende una lectura del Orlando furioso de Ludovico Ariosto como un texto eminent...
Employing theoretical perspectives from Edward Said’s Orientalism and postcolonial theory, this diss...
Il XVII canto dell’Orlando furioso non rientra nel novero dei luoghi ariosteschi irrinunciabili, ess...
Marking the fifth centenary of the publication of the first edition of the Italian masterpiece, Ario...
This contribution returns to the question of the vulgar sources of Ariosto, proposing to analyze a C...
First best seller of Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto was printed at Ferr...
In Ludovico Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso (1516, 1521, 1532), Charlemagne is mentioned in the very first...
This article, the result of original research in the field of Mediterranean culture during the Middl...
Canto XXIII marks a tragicomic turning point in the Orlando Furioso, as the tension sustaining the t...
One of the best known works in Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso, is a continuation of the rom...
Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto, as one of the most eminent works of the European Renaissance, a...
This lecture focuses on three main aspects concerning the 26th canto of the Orlando furioso: interte...
This study investigates the representation of Saracens in Boiardo's Inamoramento de Orlando and Ario...
Spine title: Ariosto & Boiardo.Includes index.Bibliography: pages 215-244.In remarkably intensified ...
È risaputo che un persistente motivo di inquietudine trascorra le ottave dell’Orlando furioso, pur s...
La presente tesis defiende una lectura del Orlando furioso de Ludovico Ariosto como un texto eminent...
Employing theoretical perspectives from Edward Said’s Orientalism and postcolonial theory, this diss...
Il XVII canto dell’Orlando furioso non rientra nel novero dei luoghi ariosteschi irrinunciabili, ess...
Marking the fifth centenary of the publication of the first edition of the Italian masterpiece, Ario...
This contribution returns to the question of the vulgar sources of Ariosto, proposing to analyze a C...
First best seller of Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto was printed at Ferr...
In Ludovico Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso (1516, 1521, 1532), Charlemagne is mentioned in the very first...