01207nam0 22003011i 450 SUN004408020070118120000.020060411d1991 |0itac50 baitaIT||||S |||||Artemisiaa cura di Roberto Contini e Gianni Papicon un saggio di Luciano BertiRoma : Leonardo-De Luca[1991]218 p. : ill. ; 29 cmCatalogo della Mostra tenuta a Firenze nel 1991.RomaSUNL000360759.5Pittura. Italia21Berti, LucianoSUNV023082Papi, GianniSUNV035607Contini, RobertoSUNV035608Gentileschi, ArtemisiaSUNV035609Leonardo-De LucaSUNV002615650ITSOL20181109RICASUN0044080UFFICIO DI BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI LETTERE E BENI CULTURALI07 CONS Pa Gentilesc hi 466 07 15559 UFFICIO DI BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI LETTERE E BENI CULTURALIIT-CE010315559CONS Pa Gentilesc hi 466caArtemisia1087072UNICAMPANIA04298oam 22007574a 450 991052485830332120231117184120.00-253-05122-3(CKB)5600000000001691(OCoLC)1245646701(MdBmJHUP)muse92581(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/88312(oapen)doab88312(EXLCZ)99560000000000169120170526d1980 uy 0engur|||||||nn|ntxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMyth and LanguageAlbert CookIndiana University Press1980Bloomington :Indiana University Press,1980.©1980.1 online resource (1 online resource ix, 332 pages)pt. 1.The social context:Levi-Strauss, myth, and the neolithic revolution --The large phases of myth --pt. 2.The classical example:Heraclitus and the conditions of utterance --Pindar: "Great deeds of prowess are always many-mythed" --Inquiry: Herodotus --Ovid: the dialectics of recovery from atavism --pt. 3.Elementary forms:Between prose and poetry: the speech and silence of the proverb --Between myth and proverb: the self-enclosure of the riddle --Parable --Metaphor: literature's access to myth --Language and myth.All aspects of human life are perceived and organized through myths and systems of myth. Language is a similarly vital function of our existence. Myth and Language explores the less universally accepted supposition that, particularly for the realm of literature, these two domains are necessarily interrelated. Moreover, this relationship is shown to be crucial to an understanding of the broader roles of literature in society. Unlike previous studies of this symbiosis, which have tended to neglect the importance of language, Myth and Language fully considers the influence of social context on the nature of literary language. Albert Cook begins his investigation into the relationship of myth and language with a critique of the work of Levi-Strauss, showing the usefulness of his binary procedures and sketching a typology of cultural phases, with particular attention to literary forms. Another section traces the redefinition of the relationship of myth and language from the oral Greek culture of Homer to the development of the discrete forms of lyric poetry, philosophy, and historiography. A final section examines the necessary reliance of elementary literary forms—proverb, riddle, parable, metaphor—on the translation of mythic concerns into language. Myth and Language is a cogent argument for the dependence of literary expression on mythic formulations.SprachegndMythosgndMythologiegndMythfast(OCoLC)fst01031678Language and languagesfast(OCoLC)fst00992154Greek literaturefast(OCoLC)fst00947441Folk literaturefast(OCoLC)fst00928888Litterature populaireHistoire et critiqueLitterature grecqueHistoire et critiqueLangage et languesMytheFolk literatureHistory and criticismGreek literatureHistory and criticismLanguage and languagesMythGreecegndCriticism, interpretation, etc.Sprache.Mythos.Mythologie.Myth.Language and languages.Greek literature.Folk literature.Litterature populaireHistoire et critique.Litterature grecqueHistoire et critique.Langage et langues.Mythe.Folk literatureHistory and criticism.Greek literatureHistory and criticism.Language and languages.Myth.Cook Albert1925-1998.1168414MdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910524858303321Myth and Language2720994UNINA