Letteratura scientifica selezionata sul tema "Impersonation – Juvenile fiction"

Cita una fonte nei formati APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard e in molti altri stili

Scegli il tipo di fonte:

Consulta la lista di attuali articoli, libri, tesi, atti di convegni e altre fonti scientifiche attinenti al tema "Impersonation – Juvenile fiction".

Accanto a ogni fonte nell'elenco di riferimenti c'è un pulsante "Aggiungi alla bibliografia". Premilo e genereremo automaticamente la citazione bibliografica dell'opera scelta nello stile citazionale di cui hai bisogno: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver ecc.

Puoi anche scaricare il testo completo della pubblicazione scientifica nel formato .pdf e leggere online l'abstract (il sommario) dell'opera se è presente nei metadati.

Articoli di riviste sul tema "Impersonation – Juvenile fiction"

1

Holzberg, Niklas. "FROM PRIAPUS TO CYTHEREA: A SEQUENTIAL READING OF THECATALEPTON". Classical Quarterly 68, n. 2 (22 ottobre 2018): 557–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000983881800037x.

Testo completo
Abstract (sommario):
In an article published thirteen years ago, I tried to break new ground by showing that the texts transmitted under the titleCataleptonas the work of Virgil can be seen to form an elaborately arranged and highly allusive book of verse written by a single author. This latter, I argued, was identical with the anonymous poet who, in an epilogue, represents the preceding poems as the juvenilia of the author later known for hisBucolics,GeorgicsandAeneidand, consequently, is himself speaking in the alleged early works asVirgil impersonator. This anonymous poet, however, cannot rightly be labelled a literary forger, since he repeatedly and quite unmistakably recalls each of Virgil's threeoperaas well as other texts written after the year 19b.c. Evidently, then, he is inviting his readers to take part in a literarylusus, one in which they are expected to be familiar not only with the texts ofBucolics,GeorgicsandAeneidbut also with the life of the man who wrote them. The fiction of a young Virgil is created, one who wrote his first poems—the verses referred to in the epilogue aselementaandrudis Calliope(Catal.18[15])—primarily under the influence of Catullus, the said poems being, with the exception ofCatal.12(9) and 16(13), epigrams. My interpretation has borne fruit, with Irene Peirano and Markus Stachon each devoting, in 2012 and 2014 respectively, a monograph to this approach and offering what are often very thorough analytical readings of the poems as the creations of aVirgil impersonator. However, neither of these two Latinists has considered one particular interpretative aspect, which I myself had only been able to introduce very briefly into my paper: the recognition that, as many more recent studies have now further corroborated, Roman poetry books were designed for linear, sequential reading, that they have, as it were, a story to tell. Peirano, moreover, disregards in her study the threePriapeapositioned in editions before the other fifteen epigrams and shown there with their own separate numbering. In the manuscripts, however, the titleCataleptonrefers without exception to a unit comprising the threePriapeaand the fifteen epigrams. The titlePriapea, found in the catalogue of the Murbach manuscripts and in some codices (for example the Graz fragment), is always attached solely to the poemQuid hoc noui est?In theVita Suetoniana-Donatiana(VSD), the termsCatalepton,PriapeaandEpigrammatawere evidently used as three different titles; the author (or his source) may not have seen thatCataleptonis the title of all the poems. Furthermore, I should like to point out that, counted together, ‘Virgil's’Priapeaand epigrams come to a total of seventeen poems and so match precisely both the total of seventeen books in the real Virgil's three works and the total number of Horace's epodes, of the poems, that is, which the not-so-real Virgil quite conspicuously evokes in his own penultimate poem (Catal.16[13]). More significantly, however, a sequential reading of thePriapea et Epigrammatacan in fact build a watertight case for taking the texts to be, as it were, a composite whole, and that is what I intend to argue in the rest of the article.
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri

Libri sul tema "Impersonation – Juvenile fiction"

1

Moss, Marissa. A soldier's secret: The incredible true story of Sarah Edmonds, a Civil War hero. New York: Amulet Books, 2012.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
2

Smith, Clete Barrett. Aliens in disguise. New York: Disney Hyperion, 2013.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
3

Moss, Jenny. Shadow. New York: Scholastic Press, 2010.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
4

Alger, Horatio. The errand boy, or, How Phil Brent won success. Philadelphia: Polyglot Press, 2005.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
5

Carter, Aimée. Queen. Don Mills, Ontario, Canada: Harlequin Teen, 2015.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
6

Bradley, F. T. Double vision. New York: HarperCollins, 2012.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
7

Corrigan, Eireann. Accomplice. Frome: Chicken House, 2010.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
8

Zinn, Bridget. Poison. New York: Disney*Hyperion, 2013.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
9

Andō, Natsumi. Arisa. New York: Kodansha Comics, 2012.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
10

Nielsen, Jennifer A. The false prince. New York: Scholastic Press, 2012.

Cerca il testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Offriamo sconti su tutti i piani premium per gli autori le cui opere sono incluse in raccolte letterarie tematiche. Contattaci per ottenere un codice promozionale unico!

Vai alla bibliografia