Academic literature on the topic 'Sicilian'

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Journal articles on the topic "Sicilian"

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García Fernández, José. "El superestrato románico: la huella del español, del francés y del occitano en el siciliano contemporáneo." Estudios Románicos 28 (December 20, 2019): 233–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.6018/er/373971.

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Sicilia siempre ha sido un enclave disputado por múltiples pueblos que terminarían por modelar la cultura de sus habitantes. En consecuencia, el siciliano se embebió lingüísticamente de las hablas de los sucesivos pobladores de la isla, de entre los que caben destacar, entre otros, los españoles y los franceses. Atentos a esta realidad, este artículo propone un acercamiento a los influjos del castellano, francés y occitano, tres variedades romances que, en forma de superestrato semántico, han influido en la configuración lingüística del siciliano. Sirviéndonos de las voces dialectales empleadas por la palermitana Giuseppina Torregrossa en su primera novela, L’Assaggiatrice, hemos podido corroborar cómo, al igual que hicieran antaño otros especialistas, tanto el dominio iberorrománico como el galorrománico siguen siendo determinantes en la conformación de la lengua siciliana, una variante lingüística aún empleada con frecuencia en la literatura isleña pese al creciente interés social por el italiano estándar desde la unificación del país. Sicily has always been a territory under dispute by multiple peoples that eventually managed to mold the culture of the inhabitants of the island. As a result, the Sicilian language absorbed the language of the ensuing settlers, particularly Spanish and French. In view of this, this article addresses the analysis of the Spanish, French and Occitan traces, three Romance variants that, through the semantic superstratum, have had an impact on the linguistic configuration of the Sicilian language. With the focus on the dialectal lexicon used by the Palermitan writer, Giuseppina Torregrossa, in her debut novel, L’Assaggiatrice, this study confirms what previous specialized authorities on the field observed in past times: that the Ibero-Romance and Gallo-Romance influence have been, and still are, key to the shaping of the Sicilian language, a linguistic variant that is most frequently used in insular literature regardless of the growing social interest in standard Italian after the unification.
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DI COSMO, Antonio Pio. "Le vesti e la nudità del sovrano che si consegna al sepolcro. La monarchia di Sicilia e le strategie d'approccio alla cesura dell'evento morte." Medievalismo, no. 29 (December 18, 2019): 97–139. http://dx.doi.org/10.6018/medievalismo.406841.

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El documento analiza el papel desempeñado por los status symbols en el funeral de los reyes de Sicilia. Esta investigación aplica el conocimiento arqueológico, antropológico y histórico, para contar la acción de la corte siciliana, que resuelve las cuestiones sobre los problemas de representación del funeral real. De esta forma, se evalúan las estrategias de comunicación orientadas al timor reventiae, que configuran las costumbres funerarias de los soberanos de Sicilia. Por lo tanto, se abre un nuevo horizonte de investigación para la fenomenología del dolor. This contribution analyses the role of status symbols during the burial of the kings of Sicily. This research applies archaeological, anthropological and historical knowledge. Information reported to the work of Sicilian sovereigns’ entourage, which solved those issues related to the problems in representing the royal funeral. In this way, communication strategies of the timor reverentiae, which shaped the funerary customs of Sicilian sovereigns, were studied. Therefore, a new horizon in the research regarding the phenome nology of grief has opened up.
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Rodriquez, Francesco, Paolo Roseano, and Wendy Elvira-García. "Grundzüge der sizilianischen Prosodie." Dialectologia et Geolinguistica 28, no. 1 (November 1, 2020): 81–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/dialect-2020-0003.

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Abstract This article is concerned with basic intonational features of Sicilian, a Romance variety spoken in Sicily in Southern Italy. While there has been some research on the intonational features of the regional variety of Italian, Sicilian intonation remains undescribed. The first part of the article provides a historic overview of the dialectal configuration of Sicilian and the Sicilian-Italian diglossia. In the subsequent section we perform an intonational analysis on a Sicilian corpus containing acoustic data of 432 utterances (216 broad focus statements and 216 information-seeking yes-no questions). Once the basic intonational features of Sicilian are described and analyzed we use the informatic tool ProDis (Elvira-García et al. 2018) for a quantitative cluster analysis in order to define geoprosodic groups within Siciliy. Finally, we carry out another cluster analysis with the aim of modelling prosodic distances between Romance varieties spoken in different areas in Italy.
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Infusino, M., and S. Scalercio. "Contributo alla conoscenza della fauna dei Macrolepidoptera delle aree prospicienti lo Stretto di Messina (Italia) (Insecta: Lepidoptera)." SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología 49, no. 195 (September 30, 2021): 529–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.57065/shilap.291.

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Nell’ambito dei monitoraggi ambientali propedeutici alla realizzazione dell’Attraversamento stabile dello Stretto di Messina sono state indagate le faune dei Macrolepidoptera presenti sul versante siciliano e su quello calabrese. Il monitoraggio è stato effettuato in 23 siti siciliani e 15 calabresi, cercando di coprire al meglio la diversità ambientale presente sulle due sponde dello stretto. Le ricerche sono state condotte dal 2010 al 2011, escludendo i mesi invernali. Sono stati rinvenuti 10.399 esemplari appartenenti a 355 specie, un numero relativamente alto se si considera l’elevata antropizzazione delle aree indagate e la sospensione dei campionamenti nei mesi invernali, anche se di queste solo Euplagia quadripunctaria (Poda, 1761) ha un interesse conservazionistico ai sensi della Direttiva “Habitat”. Fra le 168 specie rinvenute solo su una sponda dello stretto (97 sulla sponda calabrese e 71 su quella siciliana), 26 non sono presenti su entrambe le sponde per motivi biogeografici. Di queste 21 sono presenti in quasi tutta Italia, ma ad oggi non sono mai state rinvenute in Sicilia e 5 sono specie endemiche siciliane di relativamente recente differenziamento o sono specie più diffuse nel bacino sudoccidentale del Mediterraneo. Inoltre, Zanclognatha lunalis (Scopoli, 1763), viene segnalata per la prima volta sul territorio siciliano. Questi dati sottolineano ancora una volta la già nota importanza dello Stretto di Messina come barriera biogeografica che la eventuale costruzione di un suo attraversamento stabile potrebbe quanto meno indebolire.
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Giordano, Charles. "Gaetano Cipolla, Learn Sicilian/Mparamu lu sicilianu." Forum Italicum: A Journal of Italian Studies 47, no. 3 (October 4, 2013): 707–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0014585813498347.

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Fazio, Venera. "Book Review: Siciliana: Studies on the Sicilian Ethos." Forum Italicum: A Journal of Italian Studies 40, no. 1 (March 2006): 199–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001458580604000119.

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Bordonaro, Salvatore, Anna Maria Guastella, Andrea Criscione, Antonio Zuccaro, and Donata Marletta. "Genetic Diversity and Variability in Endangered Pantesco and Two Other Sicilian Donkey Breeds Assessed by Microsatellite Markers." Scientific World Journal 2012 (2012): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/2012/648427.

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The genetic variability of Pantesco and other two Sicilian autochthonous donkey breeds (Ragusano and Grigio Siciliano) was assessed using a set of 14 microsatellites. The main goals were to describe the current differentiation among the breeds and to provide genetic information useful to safeguard the Pantesco breed as well as to manage Ragusano and Grigio Siciliano. In the whole sample, that included 108 donkeys representative of the three populations, a total of 85 alleles were detected. The mean number of alleles was lower in Pantesco (3.7), than in Grigio Siciliano and Ragusano (4.4 and 5.9, resp.). The three breeds showed a quite low level of gene diversity (He) ranging from 0.471 in Pantesco to 0.589 in Grigio. The overall genetic differentiation index (Fst) was quite high; more than 10% of the diversity was found among breeds. Reynolds’ () genetic distances, correspondence, and population structure analysis reproduced the same picture, revealing that, (a) Pantesco breed is the most differentiated in the context of the Sicilian indigenous breeds, (b) within Ragusano breed, two well-defined subgroups were observed. This information is worth of further investigation in order to provide suitable data for conservation strategies.
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Vantorre, Sarah. "Truth, justice, freedom: The trial as an emancipatory narrative framework in the cultural actions of Giuseppe Fava." Forum Italicum: A Journal of Italian Studies 51, no. 1 (February 17, 2017): 22–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0014585816682481.

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In the late 1950s, after a brief career as a lawyer, Giuseppe Fava (Palazzolo Acreide, 1925) became a journalist. The exploitative activities of Cosa Nostra in the tragic aftermath of the Second World War made clear to him Sicilian society’s urgent need for progress towards greater social justice so that violence could be prevented. Fava developed an ethical conception of journalism and, by extension, of literature and theatre. ‘Where there’s truth’, Fava wrote, ‘justice can be done and freedom can be defended’. This article shows how Giuseppe Fava put his intellectual impegno into practice in order to provide the Sicilian public with a means of interpreting and understanding the mechanisms behind the Sicilian tragedy, and an incentive to take up their collective responsibility. In order to illustrate how Fava translated his journalistic and intellectual impegno into cultural actions ( Freire, 1998a ) of an emancipatory character, it focuses on his use of the criminal trial as a metaphor for his journalistic investigation into the ills of Sicilian society in his essay Processo alla Sicilia (1967), and as a narrative framework for the closing chapters of his novels Prima che vi uccidano (1976) and Passione di Michele (1980) and for his courtroom dramas La Violenza (1969) and Ultima Violenza (1983). It shows how, by literally co-opting the audience as jurors in the trial – a technique which is in many respects reminiscent of the methodologies for conscientisation developed by Paulo Freire and Augusto Boal – Fava stimulated the Sicilian public to pursue their own freedom and dignity through the creative and continuous transformation of their contextual reality.
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Mallette, Karla. "TRANSLATING SICILY." Medieval Encounters 9, no. 1 (2003): 140–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006703322576565.

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AbstractThis article sketches a theoretical strategy for approaching the literary history of Norman Sicily (centuries XI-XII). Because of its linguistic complexity—during the Norman era, Sicilians wrote in Arabic, Greek, and Latin—literary historians have resisted treating Siculo-Norman literature as a literary-historical category. Rather, the literature has been divided into three discrete, linguistically defined traditions, understood as colonial extensions of mainland literary traditions. Using a reading of Sicilian coins with multilingual inscriptions in order to examine the parallel use of multiple languages in a single "text," this article argues for a reconsideration of Sicilian literature of the era, one that looks at multilingualism not as a challenge to literary coherence but as constitutive of a literary culture.
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Morello, Gabriele. "Sicilian Time." Time & Society 6, no. 1 (February 1997): 55–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0961463x97006001003.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Sicilian"

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Guccione, Laura A. "Sicilian Roots: How the Agricultural Pursuits of Immigrant Sicilians Shaped Modern New Orleans Cuisine." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2019. https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/2667.

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The influx of immigrant Sicilians into southeastern Louisiana in the nineteenth century resulted in a parallel rise of the French Quarter as a culinary destination. Through an analysis of menus, recipe books, city directories, newspapers and census rolls, this work maps the growing influence of Sicilian farmers, vendors, and restaurateurs on New Orleans foodways. The often-overlooked community of Sicilians already living in the city in the early nineteenth century set the stage for the mass migration from Sicily to New Orleans later in the century, when Sicilians gained control of the produce food market in southeast Louisiana. A comparison of local cookbooks and recipes from before the mass arrival of the Sicilians with those created after Sicilians began to dominate agricultural production in Louisiana reveals a subtle shift in the use of ingredients, as local cooks incorporated into local dishes the produce made available by Sicilian farmers and vendors.
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Zaccardelli, Enzo Salvatore. "Arancini: a Contested Symbol of Sicilian Identity." The Ohio State University, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1587416490696375.

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Ångman, Malin. "COSA NOSTRAE UNA GOCCIA NEL MARE:GIUSEPPE IMPASTATO." Thesis, Högskolan Dalarna, Italienska, 2007. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-3236.

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Maltempi, Anne R. "SICILIANITA IN THE RENAISSANCE: SICILIAN NATIONAL IDENTITY IN THE WRITINGS OF SICILIAN HUMANISTS TOMMASO SCHIFALDO AND LUCIO MARINEO SICULO." University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1470071933.

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Carlestål, Eva. "La Famiglia : The Ideology of Sicilian Family Networks." Doctoral thesis, Uppsala University, Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, 2005. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-4794.

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Anthropological data from fieldwork carried out among a fishing population in western Sicily show how related matrifocal nuclear families are tightly knit within larger, male-headed networks. The mother focus at the basic family level is thereby balanced and the system indicates that the mother-child unit does not function effectively on its own, as has often been argued for this type of family structure. As a result of dominating moral values which strongly emphasise the uniqueness of family and kin, people are brought up to depend heavily upon and to be loyal to their kin networks, to see themselves primarily as parts of these social units and less so as independent clearly bounded individuals, and to distinctly separate family members from non-family members. This dependence is further strengthened by matri- and/or patrivicinity being the dominant form of locality, by the traditional naming system as well as a continual use of kin terms, and by related people socialising and collaborating closely. The social and physical boundaries thus created around the family networks are further strengthened by local architecture that symbolically communicates the closed family unit; by the woman, who embodies her family as well as their house, having her outdoor movements restricted in order to shield both herself and her family; by self-mastery when it comes to skilfully calculating one's actions and words as a means of controlling the impression one makes on others; and by local patriotism that separates one's co-villagers from foreigners. Hospitality, which brings inclusion and exclusion into focus, is shown to be a means of ritually incorporating non-kin and thus containing the danger the stranger represents.

The author aims to answer the question of whether the social and physical boundaries around the family network, together with the distrust towards non-family members referred to by the informants themselves, constitute a hindrance as regards collaboration with non-kin, or if collaboration beyond the family boundaries is possible and, if so, whether or not this has to lead to the family's losing its position.

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Carlestål, Eva. "La famiglia : the ideology of Sicilian family networks /." Uppsala : Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University, 2005. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-4794.

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Marovelli, Brigida. "Landscape, practice and tradition in a Sicilian market." Thesis, Brunel University, 2012. http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/7672.

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This research explores the dynamic relationship between place, history and landscape in an urban food market, Catania, Sicily. This market informs a mythological image of the island and my main concern is what significance lies underneath this representation. I examine the ways in which this image has been constructed through ideas of history, space, landscape, modernity and tradition. Unpacking these notions in the light of my in-depth ethnography, I address how vendors and buyers frame and define their relationship with space and time. After placing the market in relation to its historical and geo-political context, I argue that the representation of passivity and the lack of agency have contributed to the maintaining of elitist local and national powers. The use of space within the market informs a distinctive cosmology, in which the landscape constitutes the main local organising principle. The landscape is looked at as a cultural process, constantly renegotiated and recontextualised. The principal categories of food classification ‘wild’, ‘local’,and ‘foreign’ are explanatory notions of a specific relationship between people, food and locality. The interaction between vendors and buyers cannot be understood as a purely economic transaction. Their relationship is articulated through a unique set of practices, which are analysed throughout this thesis. Senses, social interactions, culinary knowledge, and conviviality contribute to the ability to operate within the market. I look at my own ethnographic experience as a practical “apprenticeship”. I also address the local ideas of tradition and modernity, mainly through the analysis of the shared fears of being left behind and of losing control over the process of change. The idea of modernisation as an ongoing process carries with it a sense of loss, of nostalgia for an idealised past.
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de, Lisle Christopher. "Agathokles of Syracuse : Sicilian tyrant and Hellenistic king." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2017. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:527d1dac-c70e-4de0-a3be-5cd9b07ef7eb.

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This thesis discusses Agathokles of Syracuse (r. 317-289), arguing that he should be understood in both the context of local Greek Sicilian traditions and contemporary Hellenistic developments, whereas previous studies have represented him as remaining apart from the Hellenistic world as a Sicilian dead end or embracing the Hellenistic world so enthusiastically that he abandoned his Sicilian context altogether. Thus this is a thesis about chronological continuity at the beginning of the Hellenistic period and geographical continuity between Sicily and the wider Mediterranean region. The thesis is tripartite. The first part deals with literary and numismatic source material, arguing for a shift away from source criticism in order to emphasise the coherence and agency of the surviving literary texts and the relationship of characterisations of Agathokles to broader Greek representations of autocracy. I discuss the chronology, iconography, and circulation of Agathokles' coinage, as evidence for the combination of Sicilian and Hellenistic elements. The second part discusses Agathokles' rulership style, arguing that the assumption of the royal title did not transform his rule and identifying substantial parallels with his predecessors and his contemporaries. This suggests that Sicilian tyranny and Hellenistic monarchy were aspects of a single Greek tradition of autocracy. The third part of the thesis looks at Agathokles' interactions with Sicily, Carthage, Italy, Mainland Greece and the Diadochoi, identifying the dynamics which drove these interactions and showing how they continued older models of interaction and were shaped by contemporary developments. This demonstrates the degree to which Agathokles and his local Sicilian context were part of the wider Hellenistic world.
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Gallo, Luciana. "The architectural career of Sebastiano Ittar (1768-1847) and his association with Lord Elgin." Thesis, Royal Holloway, University of London, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.313028.

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Bjornholt, B. K. "The use and portrayal of spectacle in the Madrid Skylitzes (Bib Vitr. 26-2)." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.269171.

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Books on the topic "Sicilian"

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Verga, Giovanni. Sicilian stories =: Novelle siciliane. Mineola, N.Y: Dover, 2001.

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Puleo, Carlo, and Arthur V. Dieli. Proverbi Siciliani/Sicilian Proverbs. Mineola, New York: Legas, 2014.

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Siciliana: Studies on the Sicilian ethos. Mineola, NY: Legas, 2005.

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Sicilian-English/English-Sicilian. New York: Hippocrene Books, 1997.

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Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. At the Sicilian Count's Command: The Sicilians. Toronto: Harlequin, 2008.

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Tornabene, Wanda. La cucina siciliana di Gangivecchio =: Gangivecchio's Sicilian kitchen. New York: Knopf, 1996.

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Cipolla, Gaetano. Siciliana: Studies on the Sicilian Ethos and Literature. Mineola, New York: Legas, 2014.

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Mario, Puzo. The Sicilian. Leicester: Charnwood, 1986.

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Prose, Francine. Sicilian odyssey. Washington, D.C: National Geographic, 2003.

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Lawrence, Durrell. Sicilian carousel. Mount Jackson, VA: Axios Press, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Sicilian"

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Basilone, Luca. "Sicilian Lithostratigraphic Units." In Lithostratigraphy of Sicily, 45–282. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73942-7_2.

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Majerus, Norbert, and George Taninecz. "Junior's Sicilian Dream." In Winning Innovation, 7–9. New York: Productivity Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003231837-2.

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Mason, Pamela. "1965 — Fornicate Sicilian Style!" In Much Ado about Nothing, 51–55. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-08423-4_9.

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Yeats, W. B. "Dr. Todhunter’s Sicilian Idyll." In Letters to the New Island, 36–39. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-09425-7_7.

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Tusa, Sebastiano. "Archaeoastronomy in Sicilian Prehistory." In The Light, The Stones and The Sacred, 3–22. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-54487-8_1.

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Lupo, Salvatore. "The Last Sicilian Wave." In The Two Mafias, 135–60. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137491374_7.

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Musotto, Roberto. "Mapping the Sicilian Mafia." In Understanding Mafia Networks, 106–26. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429203206-6.

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Bozoyan, Christiane, and Sonja Pointner. "Diego Gambetta: The Sicilian Mafia." In Schlüsselwerke der Wirtschaftssoziologie, 277–82. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-08184-3_27.

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Bozoyan, Christiane, and Sonja Pointner. "Diego Gambetta: The Sicilian Mafia." In Schlüsselwerke der Wirtschaftssoziologie, 299–305. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-31439-2_28.

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Corrao, Pietro. "Il «faticato peregrinaggio» di Isidoro Carini negli archivi e nelle biblioteche di Spagna (1881-1882)." In Reti Medievali E-Book, 57–78. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-423-6.04.

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The Relazione by Isidoro Carini about his research mission in Spain (1881-1882) and the events of its publication allow to reconstruct the beginnings of both the use of spanish sources for the Sicilian and Italian medieval history and of the context of the Sicilian medieval historiography at the end of the 19th Century.
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Conference papers on the topic "Sicilian"

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Soni, Pratik, Enrico Budianto, and Prateek Saxena. "The SICILIAN Defense." In CCS'15: The 22nd ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2810103.2813710.

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CLARK, ROBERT A. "SICILIAN WATER-RELATED PROBLEMS AND NEEDS." In International Seminar on Nuclear War and Planetary Emergencies 34th Session. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812773890_0038.

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Zappalà, G., G. Caruso, F. Azzaro, and E. Crisafi. "Marine environment monitoring in coastal Sicilian waters." In WATER POLLUTION 2006. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/wp060341.

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Cappuccio, Giuseppa, and Giuseppa Compagno. "FEEDBACK AND ASSESSMENT PRACTICE IN SICILIAN SECONDARY SCHOOL." In 16th International Technology, Education and Development Conference. IATED, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/inted.2022.1565.

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Passarello, Gianluca, Giuseppe Marco Tina, and Carmelo Brunetto. "Modeling of Italian ancillary services market: Sicilian case study." In 2015 International Conference on Clean Electrical Power (ICCEP). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccep.2015.7177650.

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Ardizzone, E., H. Dindo, O. Gambino, and G. Mazzola. "Scratches Removal in Digitised Aerial Photos Concerning Sicilian Territory." In 2007 14th International Workshop on Systems, Signals and Image Processing and 6th EURASIP Conference focused on Speech and Image Processing, Multimedia Communications and Services. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iwssip.2007.4381124.

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Ragaini, Richard, and Lome Everett. "SICILIAN WATER TASK FORCE MEETING POLLUTION PERMANENT MONITORING PANEL." In International Seminar on Nuclear War and Planetary Emergencies 34th Session. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812773890_0043.

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Trapanese, Marco, Francesco Raimondi, Domenico Curto, and Alessia Viola. "Evaluation of the wave energy density on the Sicilian coast." In OCEANS 2016 - Shanghai. IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/oceansap.2016.7485713.

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Folli, Raffaella, and Elinor Payne. "Investigating interfaces: an experimental approach to focus in Sicilian Italian." In ExLing 2006: 1st Tutorial and Research Workshop on Experimental Linguistics. ExLing Society, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36505/exling-2006/01/0027/000027.

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Moreci, E., G. Ciulla, and V. Lo Brano. "The Energy System of Sicilian Region, Italy: 2014 situation and evolutionary trends." In 2015 International Conference on Renewable Energy Research and Applications (ICRERA). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icrera.2015.7418628.

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Reports on the topic "Sicilian"

1

Costa, E., S. Manfio, and S. Tusa. Virtual Reality and Virtual Dives among Sicilian Marble Cargos. Honor Frost Foundation, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.33583/utm2020.03.

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Acemoglu, Daron, Giuseppe De Feo, and Giacomo De Luca. Weak States: Causes and Consequences of the Sicilian Mafia. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, December 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w24115.

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3

Davis, Michael J. Operational Art's Historical Origins - The Sicilian Campaign of 415-413 B.C. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada425999.

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