Showing 1 - 5 results of 5 for search '"physiognomy"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
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    Poetries by Giuseppe Parini: textual issues by Stefania Baragetti

    Published 2018-10-01
    “…After Gambarelli’s death (1792), Parini entered a broad process of revision of the III.4, with corrections that changed the original physiognomy; but the editorial project not come to an end. …”
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    Sciascia e Camilleritra Racconto e Cronaca Sociale by Giuseppe Marci

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…Sciascia, to talk about his first work (which will be entitled Le parrocchie di Regalpetra), uses the term “cronaca” (that appears in the title of the chapter “Cronache scolastiche”): chronicles of a village – Regalpetra – a place the writer knows very well, in its social and historical physiognomy, which he can write about, because he lived it. …”
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    Chernobyl e Fukushima: quando il nucleare fa notizia. Analisi linguistica dell'informazione ambientale su "LaRepubblica", il "Corriere della Sera" e "La Stampa" by Maria Anastasia Chieruzzi

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…This essay wants to outline the linguistical physiognomy of news concerning information about nuclear energy, examining, through a particular lexical lens, the linguistical reasons why the disaster to Chernobyl nuclear power plant and, subsequently, the one occurred at Fukushima nuclear power plant are such interesting case studies. …”
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    Addenda to the Corpus of the Master of the Avignon Decretum (Avignon, BM, Ms. 659), Active in Toulouse around the Mid-Fourteenth Century: the Liber Sextus Washington DC, Library of... by Maria Alessandra Bilotta

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…The manuscript presented in this contribution, a Liber Sextus preserved in the Library of Congress in Washington DC (Ms. 28), has so far been overlooked by art historians.The stylistic analysis of the illustrative and decorative apparatus of the manuscript, conducted in this study, makes it possible to attribute it to the anonymous illuminator called Master of the Avignon Decretum (from the most relevant manuscript illuminated by him, Avignon, Bibliothèque Municipale, Ms. 659), as revealed by the physiognomies of the faces of the characters depicted in the manuscript.This illuminator, trained most probably in Toulouse and active between 1320 and 1350, likely had links with the Dominicans of the city.…”
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