Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Finnegans Wake" ¶ 68
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Vico's and name
" Among the most prominent are the Irish ballad " Finnegan's Wake " from which the book takes its name, Italian philosopher Giovanni Battista Vico's La Scienza Nuova, the Egyptian Book of the Dead, the plays of Shakespeare, and religious texts such as the Bible and Qur ' an.

Vico's and throughout
In his lectures and throughout the body of his work, Vico's rhetoric begins from a central argument or " middle term " ( medius terminus ) which it then sets out of clarify by following the order of things as they arise in our experience.

Vico's and Wake
Many noted Joycean scholars such as Samuel Beckett and Donald Phillip Verene link this cyclical structure to Giambattista Vico's seminal text Scienza Nuova (" New Science "), upon which they argue Finnegans Wake is structured.
Knowledge of Things Human and Divine: Vico's New Science and Finnegans Wake.
* Essays on Vico's creative influence on James Joyce's Finnegans Wake

Vico's and such
The book begins with one such allusion to Vico's New Science:

Vico's and where
The years of the war require a sharp brake on Vico's activity: he leaves his studio in Rome and settles with his family in Siena, where he builds relations of deep esteem with Count Guido Chigi Saracini, a lover of chamber music and important figure in Siena's charismatic cultural environment.

Vico's and theory
Vico's theory involves the recurrence of three stages of history: the age of gods, the age of heroes, and the age of humans — after which the cycle repeats itself.

Vico's and history
Under the influence of Neapolitan born Gianbattista Vico's thoughts about art and history he turned to philosophy in 1893.
He received his doctorate in history from The Catholic University of America, with a thesis on Giambattista Vico's philosophy of history.

Vico's and is
Vico's epistemological orientation gathers the most diverse rays and unfolds in one axiomverum ipsum factum " truth itself is constructed ".
A critic of modern rationalism and apologist of classical antiquity, Vico's magnum opus is Scienza Nuova ( 1725 ), often published in English as New Science.
Vico's version of rhetoric is often seen as the result of both his humanist and pedagogic concerns.
Vico's objection to modern rhetoric is that it cuts itself off from common sense ( sensus communis ), as the sense common to all men.
Vico's rediscovery of " the most ancient wisdom " of the senses ( a wisdom that is " human foolishness " or humana stultitia ), his emphasis on the importance of civic life, and his professional obligations remind us of the humanist tradition.

Vico's and .
Vico's Science of Imagination.
Essay on Vico's humanism, archived from Johns Hopkins University Press.
* Vico's Poetic Philosophy within Europe's Cultural Identity, Emanuel L. Paparella
* Leon Pompa, M. A., Ph. D., Vico's Theory of the Causes of Historical Change, archived at The Institute for Cultural Research
(*) Source: infos from Vico's daughter, Giovanna Consorti.

name and appears
If the symbolic name or actual address of an index word or electronic switch appears or is included in the operand of an XRELEASE or SRELEASE statement ( see page 101 ), the specified index word or electronic switch will again be made available, regardless of the method by which it was reserved.
The name Fucus appears in a number of taxa.
The suffix-ol appears in the IUPAC chemical name of all substances where the hydroxyl group is the functional group with the highest priority ; in substances where a higher priority group is present the prefix hydroxy-will appear in the IUPAC name.
His name appears on a Greek Imperial coin.
In modern literature, Aeneas appears in David Gemmell's Troy series as a main heroic character who goes by the name Helikaon.
A fictionalized version of this Ahenobarbus appears in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra under the name of " Enobarbus "
In later Assyrian and Babylonian texts, the name Akkad, together with Sumer, appears as part of the royal title, as in the Sumerian LUGAL KI. EN. GIR < sup > KI </ sup > URU < sup > KI </ sup > or Akkadian Šar māt Šumeri u Akkadi, translating to " king of Sumer and Akkad ".
A cadastral survey seems also to have been instituted, and one of the documents relating to it states that a certain Uru-Malik, whose name appears to indicate his Canaanite origin, was governor of the land of the Amorites, or Amurru as the semi-nomadic people of Syria and Canaan were called in Akkadian.
Ambrosius Aurelianus appears in later pseudo-chronicle tradition beginning with Geoffrey's Historiae Regum Britanniae with the slightly garbled name Aurelius Ambrosius, now presented as son of a King Constantine.
Abimilki's name appears on the Amarna tablets.
The name appears to have been derived from Yussuf ben-Serragh, the head of the tribe in the time of Mohammed VII of Granada, al-Mustain, who did that sovereign good service in his struggles to retain the crown of which he was three times deprived.
Despite the shared name of " Adoptionism " the Spanish Adoptionist Christology appears to have differed sharply from the Adoptionism of early Christianity.
The name Accrington appears to be Anglo-Saxon in origin.
Although it appears clear that Badminton House, Gloucestershire, owned by the Duke of Beaufort, has given its name to the sports, it is unclear when and why the name was adopted.
It is the most widely copied Old English poem, and appears in 45 manuscripts, but its attribution to Bede is not absolutely certain — not all manuscripts name Bede as the author, and the ones that do are of later origin than those that do not.
Solomon ’ s name appears in Proverbs 1: 1, " The proverbs of Solomon the son of David, King of Israel.
However, the bunyip appears to have formed part of traditional Aboriginal beliefs and stories throughout Australia, although its name varied according to tribal nomenclature.
According to Stephen Frederic Dale, the name Babur is derived from the Persian word babr, meaning " tiger ", a word that repeatedly appears in Firdawsī's Shāhnāma and had also been borrowed by the Turkic languages of Central Asia.
This name appears to be from the Aramaic,, meaning ' the son ( of the ) prophet '.
Most accounts incorrectly attribute this story to Herodotus ; actually, the story first appears in Plutarch's On the Glory of Athens in the 1st century AD, who quotes from Heracleides of Pontus's lost work, giving the runner's name as either Thersipus of Erchius or Eucles.
The Greek word Messias appears only twice in the Greek Old Testament of the promised prince ( Daniel 9: 26 ; Psalm 2: 2 ); yet, when a name was wanted for the promised one, who was to be at once King and Savior, this title was used.
The name Crete ( Κρήτη ) first appears in Homer's Odyssey.
The Kingdom of Alba, a name which first appears in Constantine's lifetime, was in northern Great Britain.

0.257 seconds.