Vergogna! All’origine del mito negativo della vecchiaia femminile in Europa
di Viviana Gravano
Fotoromanza
di Giorgina Pi
Il progetto Over60: una questione di corpi e di libertà
di Mauro Danesi e Silvia Gribaudi
Erwin Olaf – On (not) growing old gracefully
by Jonathan Turner
Mettiti al Riparo. Ti Amo.
di Caterina Moroni
Disturbing flashes of my own mortality.
Vecchi corpi negli albi illustrati.
di Elena Fierli – Scosse
DOM – Porpora che cammina
di Valerio Sirna e Leonardo Delogu
Perchè ogni volta che ti guardo mi domando com’eri?
di Rossella Viti
Lo Sguardo sulla Vecchiaia Femminile: Un Anti Ritratto
di Lucia Sabino
Transgressive feminine: The case of Baba Yaga
by Anastasia Pestinova
Donne e corpo: tradizione biblica e analisi storiografica nell’invecchiamento femminile nel Tardomedioevo
di Carmine Lo Regio
Archivi tag: medioevo
oct 27th, zoom: gardens of eloquence: european rulership and the late medieval garden
https://www.history.ac.uk/events/gardens-eloquence-european-rulership-and-late-medieval-garden
The medieval enclosed garden is something of a commonplace. Outside of scholarship on specific sites, much discussion on the enclosed garden tends to focus on the timeworn literary tropes that such spaces evoke: the hortus conclusus, paradise, locus amoenus, plaisance, garden of love, etc. Often this is framed within a teleological narrative that posits the medieval garden’s enclosure as the antithesis to the expansive scope and humanist references of gardens of the renaissance and beyond. Very little discussion focuses on how medieval gardens were actually used and experienced within the larger spaces they were situated. Focusing on actual sites, contemporary accounts, as well as the evidence provided by art of the period, this paper explores how the late medieval garden was used as both a frame for Valois, Burgundian and Hapsburg rulership and as an emblem of identity.