1,448 research outputs found

    The history of the Romano famili and "Angelo, tyran de Padoue" by Victor Hugo.

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    reservedVictor Hugo, nel dramma Angelo, tyran de Padue, ricama tre diverse epoche storiche: i primi decenni dell’Ottocento, a lui contemporanei; la metà del Cinquecento, prescelta per lo svolgimento dell’azione drammatica; il tardo Medioevo evinto dai personaggi principali che compongono il racconto. Tuttavia, l’interesse storico e prettamente romantico verso il periodo medievale assume in quest’opera una rilevanza primaria. Tra le tante casate del nord Italia nominate dall’autore nell’opera, una su tutte sembra essere davvero simbolica. Particolarmente interessante è stato comprendere come la storia della famiglia da Romano costituisca il fulcro della costruzione drammaturgica. Ezzelino III e Cunizza da Romano sono elevati a emblema della poetica romantica e divengono funzionali al messaggio politico e sociale dell’autore.Victor Hugo, in his play Angelo, tyran de Padue, embroiders three different historical epochs: the first decades of the 19th century, contemporary with him; the middle of the 16th century, chosen for the unfolding of the dramatic action; and the late Middle Ages evoked by the main characters in the story. However, the historical and purely romantic interest in the medieval period takes on primary importance in this work. Of the many northern Italian lineages named by the author in the work, one in particular seems to be truly symbolic. It was particularly interesting to understand how the history of the da Romano family forms the core of the dramaturgical construction. Ezzelino III and Cunizza da Romano are elevated to emblems of romantic poetics and become functional to the author's political and social message

    Michael Angelo Caruso, international author, consultant, and speaker on Campus

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    Tollefson, Elizabeth. (2013). Michael Angelo Caruso, international author, consultant, and speaker on Campus. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/223386

    Oltre i confini della razionalità

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    - Il contributo di Angelo Volpe prende in esame fondamentalmen-te due oggetti: primo, la potenzialità indiscussa nella sociologia contemporanea degli approcci individualistici e razionali e, secondo, la necessità di trascendere la gabbia stessa della razionalità e di andare oltre. Ciò che l’autore auspica è la realizzazione di un “modello a spettro intero” per l’analisi dei fatti sociali, un modello che possa espandere il raggio d’azione della comprensione sociologica al di là di ciò che possiamo vedere e misurare razionalmente. - The contribution of Angelo Volpe essentially examines two objects: first, the unquestioned potentiality in contemporary sociology of individualistic and rational approaches, and, second, the need to transcend the very cage of rationality and go further. What the author hopes is the realization of a "full-spectrum model" for the analysis of social events, a model that can expand the scope of sociological understanding beyond what we can see and measure rationally

    Michael Angelo Buonarroti,

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    Appendix: "Three dialogues on painting composed by Francisco d'Ollanda, a Portuguese miniature painter who was in Rome in the year 1538. Tr. ... with the help of Mr. A. J. Clift, by Charles Holroyd. The manuscript was published for the first time in Renasçenca portugueza, no. VII, Porto, 1896.""The works of Michael Angelo": p. 281-283."A list of the principal books consulted by the author": p. 285-286.Mode of access: Internet

    La fabbrica illuminata

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    La fabbrica illuminata, for voice and four-track magnetic tape, was composed by Luigi Nono in 1964. The music on tape, recorded at the Studio di Fonologia Musicale of the RAI in Milan, was the result of the complex elaboration of audio materials from different sources: parts performed by the RAI choir of Milan, “thematic” improvisations sung by the mezzo-soprano Carla Henius, voices and noises from the Italsider plant in Genoa-Cornigliano, and synthesized sounds. Original audio sources Three versions by the author were identified in the RAI archives in Milan: Milan RAI Q6, 1964, analogue magnetic tape, 1 inch, 38 cm/s, quadraphonic, created by the author for performance with live voice; Milan RAI Q7, 1965, analogue magnetic tape, 1 inch, 38 cm/s, quadraphonic. With the soloist voice recorded3 ; Milan RAI E28, 196[5], analogue magnetic tape, 1⁄4 inch, 38 cm/s, monophonic. With the soloist voice recorded; The copy deposited for copyright is conserved in the Ricordi Archive, Milan: Milan Ricordi E214, 196[7], analogue magnetic tape, 1 inch, 38 cm/s, quadraphonic. The tapes are still in good condition and include a set of metadata pertinent to the content of the recordings. The preservative re-recording of the analogue document in digital format was carried out in the Audio laboratory of the RAI in Milan, together with the MIRAGE Laboratory. This restoration is tied to the basic document CLN 0002 in the Archive of Casa Ricordi in Milan, a digital conservative copy of the magnetic tape Q6 of the Archive of the Studio di Fonologia at the RAI in Milan. The restoration of the sound tracks of the work has been completed at the Audio Laboratories of the University of Udine (Gorizia campus)under the expert supervision of Angelo Orcalli and edited by Angelo Orcalli. This restored version was based on the original documents and is accompanied with a technical report

    Anthony Angelo and Law Reform in Mauritius

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    The author, former Professor and Dean of Law at Victoria University of Wellington and President of the Court of Appeal, discusses his experience working a law reform project in Mauritius with Professor Tony Angelo. As the author has experience in income tax reform, the article focuses on Professor Angelo's legislative drafting and policy development in relation to income tax law. Professor Angelo is described as a "one man Law Reform Commission" regarding his role in Mauritius, and discusses the importance of rules relating to technical interpretation and accessibility

    Mont Pelée, from painting by the author

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    Photographie d\u27une peinture de Angelo Heilprin représentant la Montagne Pelée, Martiniqu

    Anthony Angelo

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    The author, having served as his lecturer, provides a tribute to Professor Angelo of the Law Faculty at Victoria University of Wellington. The article recalls Professor Angelo's instrumental role in bringing Comparative Law to the law school, as well as playing an important part in providing academic hospitality to visiting scholars. The author praises Professor Angelo's encyclopaedic knowledge on Comparative Law, and states that the University owes him a real debt for his commitment to expand and diversify law teaching, research, and writing.&nbsp

    Tony Angelo and the University of the South Pacific

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    The author, having served as a Senior Lecturer and Associate Professor at the University of South Pacific, pays tribute to Professor Tony Angelo's involvement in that University. The author notes that Professor Angelo was instrumental in the structuring and content of the Bachelor of Laws degree, and has continued to support the University in several different ways. The original aim of its law school, which remains unchanged, is to produce graduates who are appropriately prepared for a wide range of employment and service opportunities within the region and to make an outstanding contribution to the South Pacific communities. Professor Angelo has been, and continues to be, a key player in that mission

    Vito Volterra

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    Vito Volterra (1860-1940) was one of the most famous representatives of Italian science in his day. Angelo Guerragio and Giovanni Paolini analyze Volterra’s most important contributions to mathematics and their applications, as well as his outstanding organizational achievements in scientific policy. Volterra was one of the founding fathers of functional analysis and the author of fundamental contributions in the field of integral equations, elasticity theory and population dynamics (Lotka-Volterra model). He delivered keynote lectures on the occasion of the International Congresses of Mathematicians held in Paris (1900), Rome (1908), Strasbourg (1920) and Bologna (1928). He became involved in the scientific development in united Italy and was appointed senator of the kingdom in 1905. One of his numerous non-mathematical activities was founding the National Research Council (Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, CNR). During the First World War he was active in military research. After the war he took a clear stand against fascism, which was the starting point for his exclusion. In 1926 he resigned as president of the world famous Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei and was later on excluded from the academy. In 1931 he was one of the few university lecturers who denied to swear an oath of allegiance to the fascistic regime. In 1938 he suffered from the impact of the racial laws. The authors draw a comprehensive picture of Vito Volterra, both as a great mathematician and an organizer of science
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