1.

Record Nr.

UNIORUON00225803

Titolo

Telling tales : medieval narratives and the folk tradition / edited by Francesca Canarè Sautman, Diana Conchado and Giuseppe Carlo Di Scipio

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Basingstoke, : Macmillan, 1998

ISBN

03-337-4104-8

Descrizione fisica

ix, 320 p. ; 22 cm.

Disciplina

398

Soggetti

CIVILTA' - Medioevo

NOVELLE E RACCONTI - Medioevo

FOLKLORE - Europa

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910149010503321

Autore

Dumas Alexandre

Titolo

The cenci : Celebrated crimes, book 2. / / Alexandre Dumas

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Solon, : Freshwater Seas, 2014

ISBN

1-933311-89-4

Edizione

[Unabridged.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (1 audio file) : digital

Collana

Celebrated Crimes, ; 2.

Classificazione

BIO024000HIS010000TRU000000

Soggetti

Nonfiction

Biography & Autobiography

History

True Crime

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Audiolibro

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Unabridged.

Sommario/riassunto

To paraphrase the note from the translator, The Celebrated Crimes of Alexandre Dumas père was not written for children. The novelist has spared no language—has minced no words—to describe violent scenes of violent times. In particular, the torture of Beatrice Cenci at the hands of the authorities of Rome is given in brutal and clinical detail, sparing nothing. In this, the second of the series, Dumas tells the frankly horrifying story of the tragic sons and daughers of Francesco Cenci. More beast than man in Dumas' portrait, Francesco hated them all with extraordinary cruelty and exploited them all diabolically; in particular, he sexually exploited his two daughters, especially Beatrice, both at the same time and often in the same bed as his wife Lucrezia (no relation to the famouse Borgia princess of the same name.) When, finally, his family turned on him and had him murdered, it looked for a while as though they might get away with it, but their fortunes were not that fortunate. The authorities, from Pope Clement VI on down, took bloody and terrible vengeance upon them. In what is arguably the first battered-woman defence, the crimes of the father meant nothing; the crimes of the women, everything. Never one to allow a mere fact to stand in the way of a good story, Dumas seems to restrain himself more than usual here, though he does occasionally portray a scene



from the point of view of the proverbial fly on the wall. Again, as the translator notes, "The careful, mature reader, for whom the books are intended, will recognize, and allow for, this fact." We're reading Dumas here, not Tuchman or Toynbee. Enjoy!