Starting from the fierce conflict between Desiderius Erasmus and Martin Luther, my contribution aims to show the rhetorical genesis of Erasmus' reflection on ethics. Specifically, I will focus on the fact that some of the most significant and recurrent metaphors in Erasmus' moral and theological meditation (e.g. Hercules, Silenus and the fly) trace their roots back to the work of Lucian of Samosata. Against this background, it will be possible to investigate the fundamental role of the Lucianic attitude in defining some key-concepts of Erasmus' thought, such as the rhetorical concepts of festivitas and persona. Moreover, I will demonstrate how these concepts become the starting point of Erasmus' silenic moral, modelled on the sophistic abil...
In 1518, Erasmus published The Colloquies (Colloquia), a lively Latin conversation primer, which acq...
In comparison with Lucian, hardly any other author has achieved a similar mastery of the paradox for...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 63-67)Aristotle???s Rhetoric has long been a canonical te...
Starting from the fierce conflict between Desiderius Erasmus and Martin Luther, my contribution aims...
Starting from the fierce conflict between Desiderius Erasmus and Martin Luther, my contribution aims...
Lucian, one of the most prolific authors during the Second Sophistic, is famous for his multifaceted...
This paper explores Erasmus’s creative response to the tension between his idealization of antiquity...
This article aims to investigate the representative strategies of Moriae Encomium by taking into acc...
In his effort to fashion a Christian prince in the Institutio principis Christiani, Erasmus, always ...
The literary debt which Erasmus and Thomas More owed to Lucian has been often acknowleged, and its i...
International audienceShakespeare may have been influenced by Erasmus’ work, by both his Moriae Enco...
The article analyzes the influence of Erasmus in the De consolatione (1542), Cardano's first book in...
Rhetoric was an essential discipline in the Renaissance to fully understand plays such as Thomas Kyd...
The following dissertation assesses the works of Lucian of Samosata, a satirist writing during the S...
The Greek author Lucian of Samosata (120 – 192 AD) has long remained an enigmatic figure for scholar...
In 1518, Erasmus published The Colloquies (Colloquia), a lively Latin conversation primer, which acq...
In comparison with Lucian, hardly any other author has achieved a similar mastery of the paradox for...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 63-67)Aristotle???s Rhetoric has long been a canonical te...
Starting from the fierce conflict between Desiderius Erasmus and Martin Luther, my contribution aims...
Starting from the fierce conflict between Desiderius Erasmus and Martin Luther, my contribution aims...
Lucian, one of the most prolific authors during the Second Sophistic, is famous for his multifaceted...
This paper explores Erasmus’s creative response to the tension between his idealization of antiquity...
This article aims to investigate the representative strategies of Moriae Encomium by taking into acc...
In his effort to fashion a Christian prince in the Institutio principis Christiani, Erasmus, always ...
The literary debt which Erasmus and Thomas More owed to Lucian has been often acknowleged, and its i...
International audienceShakespeare may have been influenced by Erasmus’ work, by both his Moriae Enco...
The article analyzes the influence of Erasmus in the De consolatione (1542), Cardano's first book in...
Rhetoric was an essential discipline in the Renaissance to fully understand plays such as Thomas Kyd...
The following dissertation assesses the works of Lucian of Samosata, a satirist writing during the S...
The Greek author Lucian of Samosata (120 – 192 AD) has long remained an enigmatic figure for scholar...
In 1518, Erasmus published The Colloquies (Colloquia), a lively Latin conversation primer, which acq...
In comparison with Lucian, hardly any other author has achieved a similar mastery of the paradox for...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 63-67)Aristotle???s Rhetoric has long been a canonical te...