Wednesday 03/06/2019 - 7:00pm - Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò, 24 West 12th Street, New York, NY 10011-8604. A lecture by Ambrogio Camozzi Pistoja, Harvard University. Dante is one of the greatest satirists of all time. His satire challenged and reshaped moral, legal, and linguistic boundaries. Popes, kings and members of Italy's most powerful families are placed in his upside-down world. Yet, he managed to get away with it. How did he achieve that? How did he manage to justify the use of a language so violent, and so offensive?
Ambrogio Camozzi Pistoja is Assistant Professor in Romance Languages and Literatures (Italian) at Harvard. He is the author of Vita di Alessandro con figure (Brepols, 2018) and studies the literary, visual and criminal history of insults in Roman and medieval Italian societies.
SOURCE: http://www.casaitaliananyu.org/
Award-winning author and Brooklynite Paul Moses is back with a historic yet dazzling sto...
For the first time ever, The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, in collaboration with the O...
Si intitola Pietra Pesante, ed è il miglior giovane documentario italiano, a detta della N...
On Sunday, November 17 at 2 p.m., Nick Dowen will present an hour-long program on the life...
The Morgan Library & Museum's collection of Italian old master drawings is one of the...
April 16, thursday - 6,30 EDTAzure - New York, NY - 333 E 91st St, New York 10128Tick...
Saturday, January 10at 2:00pm - 4:00pm, Garibaldi-Meucci Museum 420 Tompkins Ave, Staten I...
Saturday, february 28 - 7 pm ESTChrist & Saint Stephen's Church - 120 W 69th St,...