1,721,483 research outputs found

    Casanoviana 5 - International Review

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    DINO DETAILLEUR - Are the Memoirs true or false? An Old Casanovist Question Brought to Light Again; CORRADO VIOLA, «Pr.» come Preganziol? A proposito della Christine casanoviana; GIANLUCA SIMEONI – JEAN-CLAUDE HAUC A propos de Edoardo Tiretta; MARCO LEEFLANG & ANTONIO TRAMPUS, Correspondence Bernhard Marr – Carlo Leone Curiel. Part II: 1921-1931; FURIO LUCCICHENTI, Federico Montecuccoli degli Erri; MARCO LEEFLANG, Beyond Repair; TOM VITELLI, Marco Leeflang – In memoriam; BRANKO ALEKSIC ́, Marco Leeflang: La générosité humaine et l’amitié casanoviste; GIANLUCA SIMEONI, Bibliographical Notes 2017-201

    Entre de Ligne et Zinzendorf: bio-bibliographie de Georges Englebert (1926-1995)

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    The Belgian scholar Georges Englebert, who lived and worked in Vienna for many years in the diplomatic service, was one of the most important experts of European military history in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. His studies on the figure of Prince de Ligne and on Karl von Zinzendorf - of whom he published the diaries of the period in Brussels (1766-1770) - as well as on various figures related to the circle of Casanova relations, such as Charlotte de Thiennes de Rumbeke (born Cobenzl), remain relevant in Casanovian studies. For the first time, this article offers a biographical profile of Georges Englebert, based on the personal archive kept at the Musée Royal de l’Armée et d’Histoire militaire in Brussels, and a bibliography of his published works

    Correspondance between Bernhard Marr and Carlo Leone Curiel. Part I: 1919-1920

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    Among Bernhard Marr’s correspondence about Casanova, some number of letters was written by Carlo Leone Curiel (1876-1933). Before and after World War I, he committed himself to foster the cultural contacts between Vienna and Venice. The Carlo Leone Curiel Archive, kept at the Museo del Teatro “C. Schmidl” in Trieste, contains a few letters sent by Marr to Curiel which can integrate the already known correspondence. Among the survived letters, there are those from Marr to Curiel. These letters begin exactly when Marr’s correspondence kept in Duchcov ends. The most interesting aspect in the Curiel – Marr correspondence is the description of how difficult was resuming studies on Casanova after the war, in a Europe completely changed at a geopolitical level. Their struggle to overcome material difficulties in order to find materials and documents – even writing paper – and in order to keep communicating reveals that the Casanovists’s activity meant, although maybe unintentionally, also reconstructing an ideal and cosmopolitan Europe which seemed lost

    Correspondence Bernhard Marr - Carlo Leone Curiel. Part II: 1921-1931

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    This is the second part of Bernhard Marr’ – Carlo Leone Curiel correspondence (first part in Casanoviana 1, 2018). Some number of letters was written by Carlo Leone Curiel after World War I and testify to the slow recovery of cultural relations between the old Austro-Hungarian countries and the new Europe of nations. In particular, the second part of this correspondence includes the beginnings of new editorial projects in view of the celebrations of the second centenary of Casanova’s birth (1925), culminating in the Sirène edition of the memoirs published from 1924 and, from the literary point of view, in Stefan Zweig’s book Adepts in Self-Portraiture. The correspondence between Curiel and Marr from 1924 to 1930 describes the attempt to restart the Corbaccio edition with a new apparatus criticus and notes by Curiel and Gugitz with the collaboration of Marr and its failure. At the same time, they testity the origins of the Corbaccio’s edition of Casanova’s correspondence edited by Curiel, Gugitz and Ravà

    Italo Svevo - Racconti muranesi con documenti inediti a cura di Antonio Trampus

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    Italo Svevo scrisse i Racconti tra il 1904 e il 1909, quando si trovava nell'isola di Murano come responsabile della Ditta Veneziani, specializzata in vernici per navi. I racconti vengono qui riproposti assieme a una scelta delle lettere alla giovane moglie Livia che spiegano la personalità dell'autore, combattuta tra la vita in fabbrica e l'aspirazione per la letteratur

    The Legacy of Vattel’s Droit des gens: Contexts, Concepts, Reception, Translation and Diffusion

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    The present research forms a contribution to this new direction in the study of the intellectual history in general and of the works of Vattel in particular and is the product of a number of initiatives which brought together scholars from different academic disciplines to develop a new orientation in the study of Vattel’s works. Based on the results of these international conferences and seminars that took place across Europe and that were generously funded by a host of local, national and European grants organisations, this collection of essays provides an overview of new readings of Vattel’s works and their legacy as they have crystallised over the past decade

    Benjamin Constant, Ecrits Politiques -- Commentaire sur l'ouvrage de Filangieri (Oeuvres complètes, s. 1, t. 26), edited by Antonio Trampus and Kurt Kloocke

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    A new volume of the Collected Works of Benjamin Constant. It contains political texts from 1822 as well as Constant 's commentary on the work of Filangieri, an Italian expert in constitutional law, which is included in the volume as a facsimile. A critical apparatus and the index serve to place the commentary in the context of the age

    Giovanni Stiffoni, Ca’ Foscari e la Società europea di cultura

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    After the Second World War the birth of the European Society of Culture, founded in Venice by Umberto Campagnolo, was the basis for the development of a culture of peace and democracy that directly involved Ca’ Foscari University’s professors. Giovanni Stiffoni (1934-1994), in particular, worked as a scholar and teacher to develop relations with Spain as this gradually emerged from the dictatorship

    Dal 1847 al 1868: la fondazione della Scuola di commercio e la politica internazionale austriaca e italiana nell’Adriatico

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    The foundation of Ca’ Foscari was not consequent to the unification of Venice with the Kingdom of Italy, but the result of a long reflection initiated after 1847 by Daniele Manin. The original objective was to make Venice part of an Austrian economic and educational system, which integrated Lombardy, Veneto and the Austrian Littoral through trade, railways and navigation. Perspectives changed only with the unification of Venice with the Kingdom of Italy, in 1866, when the function of the port and the School of Commerce were no longer conceived in synergy, but in competition with the other ports of the Adriatic Se
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