In 1882, Nocentini published Il primo sinologo: P. Matteo Ricci. The first secular biography of the famous Italian Jesuit to China, it posed important questions about the origins of sinology and the role of Matteo Ricci as an early modern Italian traveller in Sino-western relations. Nocentini’s rereading of Matteo Ricci and travel literature in Italy in the late nineteenth century is examined through theories proposed by Derrida, Barthes and Nabokov. These theories provide an interpretative approach to understand the rereading carried out in Nocentini’s work, as they are intended as a process of interpretation and reinterpretation, as well as appropriation of the original meaning
The Italian travellers to the East during the 16th century left us some important works that they el...
This essay discusses the formation of “Italian travellers to Iran” as both a popular idea and scient...
Bracciolini’s contribution to visual materiality, graphical innovation, and the book trade is the dr...
In 1882, Nocentini published Il primo sinologo: P. Matteo Ricci. The first secular biography of the ...
On the contribution to introducing Western learning to China by Matteo Ricci (1552-1610), the 16th -...
In Europe, the historical representation and narration of China and the Orient more in general from ...
In this introductory essay, the editors discuss the new perspectives offered by the volume on travel...
This study aims to investigate the development of a shared sense of identity and community that occu...
This article offers an overview of the readings of Marco Polo’s ventures offered to the Italian publ...
This article primarily focuses on the origin, the earliest dissemination and the accommodation of Eu...
Cette recherche a pour objet l’étude de la question de la rencontre dans l’œuvre italienne de Matteo...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
At the end of the nineteenth century, Italy welcomed an official embassy sent by the government in T...
Rereading Travellers to the East aims to offer a new perspective on travel literature, the question ...
This article compares trends in the reception of the fourteenth-century travel narrative (Relatio) o...
The Italian travellers to the East during the 16th century left us some important works that they el...
This essay discusses the formation of “Italian travellers to Iran” as both a popular idea and scient...
Bracciolini’s contribution to visual materiality, graphical innovation, and the book trade is the dr...
In 1882, Nocentini published Il primo sinologo: P. Matteo Ricci. The first secular biography of the ...
On the contribution to introducing Western learning to China by Matteo Ricci (1552-1610), the 16th -...
In Europe, the historical representation and narration of China and the Orient more in general from ...
In this introductory essay, the editors discuss the new perspectives offered by the volume on travel...
This study aims to investigate the development of a shared sense of identity and community that occu...
This article offers an overview of the readings of Marco Polo’s ventures offered to the Italian publ...
This article primarily focuses on the origin, the earliest dissemination and the accommodation of Eu...
Cette recherche a pour objet l’étude de la question de la rencontre dans l’œuvre italienne de Matteo...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
At the end of the nineteenth century, Italy welcomed an official embassy sent by the government in T...
Rereading Travellers to the East aims to offer a new perspective on travel literature, the question ...
This article compares trends in the reception of the fourteenth-century travel narrative (Relatio) o...
The Italian travellers to the East during the 16th century left us some important works that they el...
This essay discusses the formation of “Italian travellers to Iran” as both a popular idea and scient...
Bracciolini’s contribution to visual materiality, graphical innovation, and the book trade is the dr...