Корично изображение Електронен

Loyola's greater narrative the architecture of the spiritual exercises in golden age and Enlightenment literature /

Основен автор: Conrod, Frederic.
Автор-организации: ebrary, Inc.
Формат: Електронен
Език: English
Публикувано: New York : Peter Lang, 2008.
Серия: American university studies. Romance languages and literature, v. 229
Предмети:
Онлайн достъп: An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view
Съдържание:
  • Baroque orders of corruption
  • The spiritual exercises, or the formation of mental territories and orders of corruption
  • Totalitarian structures and orders of corruption
  • The formation of an image reservoir
  • Imitatio Christi and baroque inversions
  • Ego vobis romae propitius ero : diffusion of the spiritual exercises in Rome (1550-1650)
  • The first mission of new apostle
  • an image reservoir in the multiple-layer urban fabric
  • Corresponding dynamics
  • Roman churches after the spiritual exercises
  • The mother church of Il Gesù and Sant Andrea al Quirinale
  • The Roma ignaziana
  • Transformation of the visual dynamics of the spiritual exercises in the late works of Miguel de Cervantes
  • Cervantes, corruption, the urban and the company
  • Don Quixote, an excessive projection in a greater narrative
  • Last pilgrimage : Cervantes representation of Rome in Persiles
  • Transforming the orders of corruption in El criticón : the case of Baltasar Gracián, a Jesuit preparing the way for the Enlightenment
  • Pre-Enlightenment coming out of the exercises
  • The exercise of decoding monstrosity
  • Contemplating eternal arts beyond the Roma ignaziana
  • The enigmatic parallel writing of El comulgatorio
  • From Loyolan imagination to Sadean Enlightenment : the parodying inversions of the spiritual exercises in the novels of the Marquis de Sade
  • Philosophical criticism of Loyolan system in Enlightenment
  • Sadean inversions
  • Collecting the tableaux in the cent vingt journées
  • Melting down the concept of spiritual directors
  • Forcing the exercitant in desiring the opposite
  • Revisiting the Roma ignaziana in Juliette.