Gender and Genealogy in Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata |
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Page 87
... Crusaders ? And why does Boemondo , whose name is on the tongue of every Christian , have a story that remains untold ? His In accounts of the First Crusade , which include descriptions of the capture of Nicaea and Antioch , Boemondo ...
... Crusaders ? And why does Boemondo , whose name is on the tongue of every Christian , have a story that remains untold ? His In accounts of the First Crusade , which include descriptions of the capture of Nicaea and Antioch , Boemondo ...
Page 88
... Crusades and of the Crusaders ' initial conquests occupies the first part of Canto III of the revised version of the epic.44 Goffredo , whom Tasso names here as possible narrator because he is among the conquerors of the city ( " alcun ...
... Crusades and of the Crusaders ' initial conquests occupies the first part of Canto III of the revised version of the epic.44 Goffredo , whom Tasso names here as possible narrator because he is among the conquerors of the city ( " alcun ...
Page 89
... Crusaders finally conquer the city because Boemondo resorts to relying on a spy who betrays Antioch . This story of ... Crusades write that Armenians were responsible for the murder of the ruler of Antioch . Tasso avoids the issue of ...
... Crusaders finally conquer the city because Boemondo resorts to relying on a spy who betrays Antioch . This story of ... Crusades write that Armenians were responsible for the murder of the ruler of Antioch . Tasso avoids the issue of ...
Contents
CLORINDAS FATHERS | 15 |
ERMINIA AND HISTORY | 55 |
SECRETS OF A SORCERESS | 113 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Aeneid aggression Aladino Alcina ambiguity appears Ariosto's Armida armor Arsete Bartlett Giamatti battle Boemondo Camilla Canto Canto XII capture of Antioch Carlo and Ubaldo character ché Christian camp Christian warriors Clorinda Clorinda's story Cornell University Cornell University Press critical crucial Crusaders death desire dream ekphrasis enchanted woods Erminia eyes feminine figure Firenze Freud gaze gender Gerusalemme Conquistata Gerusalemme Liberata Giamatti Goffredo Haven ideological interpretation Ithaca Jerusalem lament letter literary magic Magus Magus of Ascalona maiden warrior male Martinelli Milano narrative narrator Nicea non-Christian occhi octave Olindo Orlando Furioso Orlando Innamorato Peter the Hermit poet poetic poetry question Ralph Nash reader reading Renaissance Epic Renaissance Literature reveal Rinaldo romance Rousseau Ruggiero Scipione Gonzaga sorceress Stanford Italian Review story of Antioch subtexts Sveno sword Tancredi Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata Tasso's poem tell Torquato Tasso trans translation Vafrino verisimilitude vision woman wounded Yale University Press Zatti