Princess Brambilla - images/text

Read the illustrated literary text is simultaneously think pictures and words. This articulation between the written text and pictures adds potential, expands and becomes complex. Coincides with nowadays discussions on Giorgio Agamben's "contemporary" that add to what adheres to respe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maria Aparecida Barbosa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2016-01-01
Series:Cadernos de Tradução
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/traducao/article/view/2175-7968.2016v36n1p79/31093
Description
Summary:Read the illustrated literary text is simultaneously think pictures and words. This articulation between the written text and pictures adds potential, expands and becomes complex. Coincides with nowadays discussions on Giorgio Agamben's "contemporary" that add to what adheres to respectively time the displacement and the distance needed to understand it, shakes linear notions of historical chronology. Somehow the coincidence is related to the current interest in the concept of "Nachleben" (survival), which assumes the images of the past ransom, postulated by the art historian Aby Warburg in a research on ancient art of motion characteristics in Renaissance pictures Botticelli's. For the translation of the Princesa Brambilla – um capriccio segundo Jakob Callot, de E. T. A. Hoffmann, com 8 gravuras cunhadas a partir de moldes originais de Callot (1820) to Portuguese such discussions were fundamental, as I try to present in this article.
ISSN:1414-526X
2175-7968