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         Italian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Modern Italian Literature (PCHL-Polity Cultural History of Literature) by Ann Hallamore Caesar, Michael Caesar, 2007-09-17
  2. Teaching Italian American Literature, Film, and Popular Culture (Options for Teaching (Numbered Paperback)) by Edvige Giunta, Kathleen Zamboni McCormick, 2010-03-01
  3. The Cambridge History of Italian Literature
  4. An Introduction to Twentieth Century Italian Literature: A Difficult Modernity (New Readings S.) by Robert S. C. Gordon, 2005-08-26
  5. Italian Tales: An Anthology of Contemporary Italian Fiction (Italian Literature and Thought)
  6. Insieme nel buio e altri due racconti (Italian Edition) by Marco Freccero, 2010-05-27
  7. Dictionary of Italian Literature: Revised, Expanded Edition
  8. The Italian Renaissance Reader (Meridian)
  9. Italian Stories (American Literature (Dalkey Archive)) by Joseph Papaleo, 2002-01
  10. The Italian American Heritage: A Companion to Literature and Arts (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities)
  11. A History of Italian Literature: Revised Edition by Ernest Hatch Wilkins, 1974-01-01
  12. Queer Italia: Same-Sex Desire in Italian Literature and Film
  13. A Treasury of Italian Love: Poems, Quotations & Proverbs/in Italian and English
  14. The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature (Oxford Companions)

1. Welcome To Italy1 Literature Page Of 13 And 14 Centuries
Features information about the development of italian literature from the 13th to the 20th century.
http://italy1.com/literature/
PlaceMenu("boundmenu") Benvenuti
Mercoledi 9 Aprile 2003 05:56 (Ora Italiana)
13th and 14th Centuries Italian Literature,
literature written in the Italian language from about the 13th century to the present.
Middle Ages
13th and Early 14th Centuries
Meanwhile another native, original type of poetry had appeared, a devotional poetry inspired by St. Francis of Assisi, whose Canto dell' amore (Canticle of Creatures) sings of love for all of God's creation rather than for any single human being. The same feeling was expressed in a collection of legends in verse, Fioretti (Little Flowers), based on the life of St. Francis. Other Franciscan poets followed in the 13th century, among them a poet with a Dantesque imagination, Jacopone da Todi, among whose beautiful hymns are the famous "Our Lady of the Passion" and "Stabat Mater." Dante is one of the great figures of world literature. He is remarkable for the loftiness of his thought, the vividness and fluency of his verse, and the boldness of his imagination. He was one of the founders of Italian literature through his use of the vernacular for some of his greatest works. About 1304 he wrote in Latin De Vulgari Eloquentia (Concerning the Common Speech), in which he advocated the use of Italian as a literary language.

2. Italian Literature In HTML

http://www.crs4.it/HTML/Literature.html
Antologia (frammentaria) della Letteratura Italiana
Poesia
Dante Alighieri La Divina Commedia
La Vita Nuova
Pietro Aretino Dubbi Amorosi Ludovico Ariosto Orlando Furioso Guido Cavalcanti Rime Ugo Foscolo I Sonetti
Dei Sepolcri
Guido Gozzano Tutte le Poesie Giacomo Leopardi Canti (non completi) Alessandro Manzoni Il Cinque Maggio Vincenzo Monti Sulla morte di Giuda
Teatro
Carlo Goldoni Gli Innamorati
La Locandiera
Testi religiosi
La Bibbia San Francesco d'Assisi Il Cantico Delle Creature
Narrativa
Giovanni Boccaccio Decameron Gabriele D'Annunzio Il Piacere
Le Novelle della Pescara
Edmondo De Amicis Cuore Grazia Deledda Canne al Vento
Cenere
Ugo Foscolo Ultime Lettere di Jacopo Ortis Alessandro Manzoni I Promessi Sposi Luigi Pirandello Una Giornata
Il Turno

L'Esclusa

Il fu Mattia Pascal
Italo Svevo Senilità Federigo Tozzi Bestie Giovanni Verga I Malavoglia
Novelle Rusticane
Narrativa per ragazzi
Carlo Lorenzini (Collodi)

3. European Literature - Electronic Texts
Digitally preserved and readable poetry, prose, journals and rare manuscripts in languages other than English. German Literature. Greek Literature. Irish Literature. italian literature. Latin Literature. Norwegian Literature
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/wess/etexts.html
Electronic Text Collections in Western European Literature
This page lists Internet sources for literary texts in the western European languages other than English. Translations are mentioned only when they are included in collections of original language texts, or when they are themselves of interest. Collections are listed more or less in order of size; indivdual authors are listed alphabetically. Catalan Literature
Danish Literature

Dutch Literature

Finnish Literature
... EuRoDocs lists many historical and social science texts in western European languages. If you put up an electronic text, find a collection that's not listed here, or find changes in one of the collections please let me know Thanks to all who have sent in new listings!
Catalan Literature
Danish Literature

4. Italian Literature Resources
italian literature Resources This site provides annotated links to scholarly web resources of particular interest to NYU scholars of italian literature. Where possible, links to highquality, scholarly meta-sites are given.
http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/hum/italian
Italian Literature Resources
This site provides annotated links to scholarly web resources of particular interest to NYU scholars of Italian Literature. Where possible, links to high-quality, scholarly meta-sites are given. Selection Criteria. Page maintained by: Jennifer Vinopal URL: http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/hum/italian/ Questions/Comments: libweb@nyu.edu Return to: Humanities Bobst Library NYU Libraries NYU Home Page ... Comments

5. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Italian Literature
(Catholic Encyclopedia)
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08245a.htm
Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... I > Italian Literature A B C D ... Z
Italian Literature
Origins and Development The modern language of Italy is naturally derived from Latin, a continuation and development of the Latin actually spoken among the inhabitants of the peninsula after the downfall of the Roman Empire. It is still disputed how far this spoken Latin was identical with the classical literary language of Rome, the Latinus togatus, and how far it was a merely popular tongue, the sermo rusticus. Crusades and through commerce; the Saracenic In the "De Vulgari Eloquentia" (i, 10-16), Dante speaks of the "many discordant varieties of the Italian vernacular", and rejects them all in favour of the "illustrious, cardinal, courtly, and curial vernacular in Italy", the standard and ideal national language, "which belongs to every city of Italy, and seems to belong to none, and by which all the municipal dialects of the Italians are measured, weighed and compared". These dialects fall into three groups:
  • (1) Ligurian, Piedmontese, Lombard and Emilian, and Sardinian, which form a Gallo-Italian group apart from the vernacular of the rest of the peninsula;
  • (2) Venetian, Corsican, Sicilian, Neapolitan, Umbrian, and the dialects of the Marches and of Rome, which, though diverging from true Italian, form one system with it;

6. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Italian Literature
BUBL LINK / 515 Catalogue of Internet Resources italian literature Subjects children's literature, italian literature. DeweyClass 853.8
http://bubl.ac.uk/link/i/italianliterature.htm
BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
Italian literature
A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • Armarium Labyrinthi: Labyrinth Latin Bookcase
  • Carlo Collodi: The Adventures of Pinnochio
  • Dante Alighieri
  • Decameron Web ...
  • Windows on Italy: Renaissance to the 19th century Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    Armarium Labyrinthi: Labyrinth Latin Bookcase
    An extensive collection of Latin texts. Includes Latin Bible, liturgical texts, classical and late classical Latin texts, early patristic writings (c.150-c.300), medieval Latin texts and translations (c.400-c.1500) and miscellaneous Latin texts and historical documents.
    Author: Martin Irvine and Deborah Everhart
    Subjects: italian literature, latin
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    documents
    Location: usa
    Last checked:
    Carlo Collodi: The Adventures of Pinnochio
    Full text of the children's book Pinnochio, by Italian author Carlo Lorenzini, (1826-1890), who wrote under the pseudoname Carlo Collodi.
    Author: Carlo Collodi
    Subjects: children's literature, italian literature
  • 7. Yale Library Selected Internet Resources : Italian Language & Literature
    Italian Dialect Poetry (Brooklyn College). italian literature Resources (NYU). Italianistica Online
    http://www.library.yale.edu/Internet/italianlanglit.html

    Selected Internet Resources
    Search this site Email address protected by JavaScript.
    Please enable JavaScript to contact me.
    Local Links
    Associations

    8. Anthology Italian Literature Page
    An audio anthology of classical and contemporary italian literature in mp3 format.Category Arts Literature World Literature Italian...... Classical and Contemporary Texts of italian literature on audiofile. Eachaudiofile in the italian literature Collection comes with text.
    http://www.ilnarratore.com/homeE/indexAnthology.html

    What's New
    AudioSamples The Narration Useful Links ...
    Why ?
    THIS IS AN OLD PAGE -
    PLEASE REDIRECT TO THE NEW SITE:
    CLICK HERE !
    Classical and Contemporary Texts of Italian Literature on audiofile
    A learning method for all those wishing to enrich their cultural knowledge of Italian and to appreciate more about this ancient land.
    We offer a pleasant and simple listening experience of the most important chapters of Italian Literature from the great poets of the Middle Ages to contemporary writers, read by narrators, writers and actors.
    The narrators’ voices enliven and enrich the stories with the resulting improvement to the reader’s imagination and thinking.
    Learning with text and voice improves language and pronunciation skills.

    9. ITALIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
    ITALIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE. CLASSICAL LATIN. The Roman Empire, themost THE ORIGINS OF AN italian literature. The rise of a literature
    http://www.crs4.it/~riccardo/Letteratura/Misc/Storia.html
    ITALIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
    CLASSICAL LATIN
    The Roman Empire, the most far-flung of the ancient world, was populated by around 80 million people, roughly half of whom spoke Latin: no other antique language was as widespread or important. The language spoken in Rome was the model for the other regions of the Empire and by the time of Julius and Augustus Caesar (60 B.C. - 15 A.D.), through writers like Cicero, Sallust, Virgil and Horace, it had developed fixed rules (of grammar, syntax and meaning) which were held to be perfect. After the fall of the Roman Empire, this "classic" Latin remained a fundamental means of communication between nations and scholars, as well as becoming the language of the Church.
    THE RISE OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND THE FORMATION OF ITALIAN DIALECTS
    When the Roman Empire fell (476 A.D.), it was replaced by new Roman-Barbarian kingdoms and Classical and spoken Latin were permanently divided. The former remained unchanged, used only in texts or by an educated elite whilst the spoken form was used by millions of people in their daily lives and thus came into contact with the languages of the Germanic invaders and was developed into different tongues. In this way were born the Romance languages. In Italy, the use of Latin as the single language gradually faded to be replaced by numerous dialects: the "vernacular" which varied from region to region.
    THE FIRST APPEARANCES OF THE VERNACULAR IN LITERATURE
    The vernacular first appears in literature in the poetry of the 13th century with the Sicilian, Tuscan and "Stil novo" poets who employed a refined lexicon. The shift to the use of the vernacular made possible a set of specific rules and forms thereby removed from the vicissitudes of the spoken language. At the same time it became possible to refine linguistic expression by toning down the rougher local dialects. Later, the great Tuscan writers of the 13th and 14th centuries, Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio, made a fundamental contribution by writing a literary language that would be the model for succeeding centuries.

    10. Welcome To Italy1 Literature Page Of 19 And 20 Centuries
    until 1870, when the evacuation of French troops from Rome removed the last traceof foreign domination, the prevailing influence in italian literature and in
    http://italy1.com/literature/itali19_20.htm
    PlaceMenu("boundmenu") Benvenuti
    Mercoledi 9 Aprile 2003 05:56 (Ora Italiana)
    19th and 20th Centuries The 19th Century
    Liberation and unification had been a hope of Italian writers since the 13th century. At that time nationalism had been manifested, among other ways, by the development of an Italian literary language. The hope of liberation was stimulated further by the French Revolution, which released a fervent nationalism throughout Europe. From the beginning of the 19th century until 1870, when the evacuation of French troops from Rome removed the last trace of foreign domination, the prevailing influence in Italian literature and in almost every phase of Italian life was nationalism, in its particular Italian form called the Risorgimento. Nationalism, Romanticism, and Classicism
    Early 19th-century Italian literature was marked not only by nationalism but also by a lingering classicism and by a new spirit of romanticism, which, emphasizing history and tradition, encouraged nationalism. The great influence on Italy by the French Revolution and Napoleon I is directly evident in the works of Vincenzo Monti, Ugo Foscolo, and Carlo Porta. Monti's writings mirror the instability of his convictions. He began as a foe of the French Revolution, as shown in his poem La bassvilliana (1793), about the assassination of the French envoy Hugo Bassville, and he later favored the French cause, extolling Napoleon in a series of poems. Monti is best known for his translation of Homer's Iliad.

    11. Carrie: Italian Literature
    italian literature. (Versione ufficiale della CEI) La Bibbia
    http://www.ukans.edu/carrie/stacks/italian_main.html
    Italian Literature
    Return to Carrie Home Page Site maintained by Kendall Simmons, ksimmons@ukans.edu
    URL: http://www.ukans.edu/carrie/stacks/italian_main.html

    12. Italian Literature:
    italian literature. Electronic Full Texts. This site provides links to websites offering full text italian literature and related resources.
    http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/hum/italian/it-digi.htm
    Italian Literature
    Electronic Full Texts
    This site provides links to web sites offering full text Italian literature and related resources. Sites included here contain scholarly materials. Those sites pertaining to individual authors have been excluded, as the contents of these sites are less useful for academic research. Authors are organized alphabetically by century, with their texts listed in chronological order. Most are original language texts, but when available, the English translation is also provided. A list of links to metasites is also included below since additional texts are continually being added to each of these sites. Since many of the texts are available at more than one of these metasites, the editions provided here through direct links were chosen from the sites with greatest clarity, most often Antologia (frammentaria) della Letteratura Italiana or Liber liber.
    Origins and Duecento
    The Trecento
    The Quattrocento
    The Cinquecento ...
    The Novecento
    See also Electronic Texts Available within Bobst Library
    Meta Sites
    • Antologia (frammentaria) della Letteratura Italiana contains a nice range of authors and time periods including poetry, narrative, drama, and some religious and philosophical texts. The works are characterized according to their genre and are then listed alphabetically within each of these subdivisions.

    13. Carmen Covito Web - Indice
    Contemporary italian literature by an Italian woman novelist. Includes 'Utilities for Bookworms and Cyberfeminists.' (Bilingual Italian and English).
    http://www.carmencovito.com
    Il tuo browser non è in grado di far apparire il menu Javascript: clicca qui per navigare con la mappa del sito www.carmencovito.com Ma che ci fanno ancora tanti scrittori chiusi nella torre d'avorio della letteratura pura e incontaminata?
    La contaminazione dei linguaggi, dei generi e delle conoscenze è ariosa e, qualche volta, esilarante.
    Venite a respirarne un po' con me.
    La guerra in Iraq distrugge vite umane -
    ma sta mettendo a rischio anche la nostra storia:
    Emergency
    Che cosa offre alla narrativa di oggi l'archeologia?
    Quali storie si possono trovare negli scavi di Pompei? con Carmen Covito laboratorio residenziale di scrittura sul campo 19 -26 luglio 2003, Vico Equense (NA) Laboratorio Programma e informazioni sul corso e sulla La rossa e il nero La rossa e il nero Ascolta il primo capitolo nella lettura di Gabriella Franchini Entra nel libro E-book Sono di moda gli e-book? Benissimo, ma non limitatevi a leggerli. Fatevene uno! Come questo, per esempio:

    14. Italian: Literature
    italian literature. FullText, Digitized italian literature. italian literature Microform Sets at Bobst
    http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/hum/italian/it-lit.htm
    Italian:
    Literature
    Italian Microform Sets at Bobst
  • Literary Theory
    • Spoon Collective Archives of electronic mailing lists on individuals and schools of thought. Also contains links to related sites.
    • Bakhtin, M. M. (Mikhail Mikhailovich),
      • Bakhtin Centre Contains database of literature on and about Bakhtin. From Bakhtin Centre, University of Sheffield.
      Dictionaries (contemporary and historical) and Encyclopedias
      Encyclopedias
      • Encyclopedia Britannica Includes full-text of the Encyclopedia Britannica, Webster's Collegiate Dictionary and the Britannica Yearbooks.
      Bibliographies and Biographical Info.

      Last Updated: March 2001
      Page maintained by: Jennifer Vinopal
      URL: http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/hum/italian/it-lit.htm
  • 15. Carrie: Italian Literature
    della Repubblica Italiana; Aretino, Pietro Dubbi Amorosi;
    http://www.ku.edu/carrie/stacks/italian_main.html
    Italian Literature
    Return to Carrie Home Page Site maintained by Kendall Simmons, ksimmons@ukans.edu
    URL: http://www.ukans.edu/carrie/stacks/italian_main.html

    16. Sommario Di Bollettino '900 - Electronic Newsletter Of '900 Italian Literature
    Translate this page Bollettino '900 - Electronic Newsletter of '900 italian literature - © 1995-2003Dipartimento di Italianistica dell'Università di Bologna In collaborazione
    http://www2.comune.bologna.it/bologna/boll900/default.html
    Discussioni
    Saggi Interventi Presentazioni ... Strumenti
    Discussioni
    Agli interconnessi , di Federico Pellizzi
    Dialogo su Tondelli
    , di Enrico Palandri e Antonio Spadaro
    Crisi della critica, crisi della letteratura
    , di Guido Guglielmi
    Tavola rotonda sui "generi marginali"
    , con P.Bagni, A.Battistini, R.Ceserani, F.Pellizzi
    Autonomia e biblioteche. Appunti corsivi e preliminari
    , di Luca Lenzini
    Italianistica in crisi: l'insegnamento della letteratura
    , di Remo Ceserani
    Italianistica in crisi: quali prospettive?
    , di Armando Gnisci
    L'Italianistica e l'Europa
    , di Ezio Raimondi
    Italianistica in crisi. Nasce una nuova associazione
    , di Andrea Battistini
    Altri interventi sulla crisi dell'italianistica
    Intervento sulla "polemica romana" , di Remo Ceserani La posta del cuore (1-3) , di Vincenzo Bagnoli Saggi Tradurre Buzzati Scrittori italiani e cinema , di Cristina Bragaglia Realazioni tra letteratura e cinema , di Jeanne-Marie Clerc L'adattamento cinematografico , di Claude Lafaye Cosa ne fa, il cinema, dei libri? , di Donata Meneghelli Rohmer, Celati e il racconto morale

    17. VoS - Voice Of The Shuttle
    Antologia (frammentaria) della Letteratura Italiana (italian literature in HTML)(CSR4 Center for Advanced Studies, Research and Development, Sardinia).
    http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=1449

    18. Guido Mazzoni Collection - Italian Literature
    Duke University italian literature. Browse database entries for thiscategory View exhibit items related to this category With 3,309
    http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/mazzoni/italit.html
    Guido Mazzoni Collection
    Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library - Duke University
    Italian Literature
    Browse database entries for this category
    View exhibit items related to this category

    With 3,309 records, this is one of the largest of the sub-collections. Formats include small volumes, pamphlets, newspapers, clippings, periodicals issues, and manuscripts (mostly student theses). Dates in this sub-collection range from 1632 to 1942. There are four seventeenth- century imprints, and many hundreds from the eighteenth century. This subject heading covers works of Italian fiction, and includes works having to do with the history and criticism of Italian fiction. Its scope is enormous, but the major focus is on medieval, Renaissance, and nineteenth-century Italian literature, with particular emphasis on the latter. Some twentieth-century writers are represented, however, including some of the Scapigliati and the Futurists. Some of the items take the form of short stories or serialized novellas found in periodicals. If Mazzoni specifically marked these items, they will have their own electronic record rather than the record of the periodical (though its volume and date will be noted in the record). If Mazzoni did not specifically mark these items, the author's name will appear in the "Other Names" field, and the record will have as its title the that of the periodical. Individual authors and criticism of their works represented in this sub- collection are: Guido Mazzoni, Virgilio Malvezzi, Baldassar Scaramelli, Alessandro Manzoni (S), Luigi Pirandello (A and S), Grazia Deledda, Giovanni Boccaccio (A and S), Francesco Petrarca (A and S), and Melchiorre Cesarotti (A and S).

    19. Babelguides: Italian Literature
    You are at Home Books italian literature, site in beta Browse Getthe Newsletter. italian literature front cover. Invisible
    http://www.babelguides.com/view/lit/ital
    ABOUT HELP JOIN HOME ... FORUM You are at Home Books Italian Literature :: site in beta Browse Books
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    Forgot your password? Enter your unsername only, and click reset password Create an account if you don't yet have a username. Get the Newsletter Italian Literature Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino Translated by William Weaver Original title: Invisible Cities is a kind of I Ching (more...) The Skin by Curzio Malaparte Translated by D. Moore Original title: La pelle This novel gives a truthful account of the spiritual (more...) Marcovaldo: or, The Seasons in the City by Italo Calvino Translated by William Weaver Original title: Marcovaldo (more...) That Awful Mess on the via Merulana by Carlo Emilio Gadda Translated by William Weaver Original title: Quer pasticciaccio brutto de via Me (more...) Under the Jaguar Sun by Italo Calvino Translated by William Weaver Original title: Sotto il sole giaguaro A short unfinished work but nevertheless a fabulous descent into the world of the senses. This book comes from the period when Calvino was such an established artist that he could experiment and still command an audience. As with

    20. Babelguides: The Babel Guide To Italian Literature
    The Babel Guide to italian literature There is an embarrassment of riches in contemporaryItalian letters; Italian guide coverItalo Calvino, the divine Pasolini
    http://www.babelguides.com/guides/ital
    ABOUT HELP JOIN HOME ... FORUM You are at Home Guides Italian Guide :: site in beta Browse Books
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    Forgot your password? Enter your unsername only, and click reset password Create an account if you don't yet have a username. Get the Newsletter The Babel Guide to Italian Literature There is an embarrassment of riches in contemporary Italian letters; Italo Calvino, the divine Pasolini, Cesare Pavese, Natalia Ginzburg and Marta Morazzoni, not to mention Tondelli, Verga, Pirandello and Tabucchi... All, along with many others, presented here in the context of their translated novels and short stories. The first and highly acclaimed volume in the Babel Guides series. Press Comments a lively and accessible introduction for English readers to contemporary Italian literature! All Books People Publishers Forum Posts Polls Users front guides books forum ... contact form babelguides.com Daily RSS feed Powered by Scoop Last modified Tue Apr 8 , 2003

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