The Disappearance of the Dead From Real ...
Type de document :
Partie d'ouvrage
Titre :
The Disappearance of the Dead From Real and Imaginary Epitaphs of Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century England
Auteur(s) :
Dutoit, Thomas [Auteur]
Centre d'Études en Civilisations, Langues et Lettres Étrangères - ULR 4074 [CECILLE]

Centre d'Études en Civilisations, Langues et Lettres Étrangères - ULR 4074 [CECILLE]
Éditeur(s) ou directeur(s) scientifique(s) :
Adrienne Lezzi-Hafter
Titre de l’ouvrage :
Les pierres de l'offrande. Autour de l'oeuvre de Christoph W. Clairmont
Éditeur :
Akanthus Verlag für Archäologie
Lieu de publication :
Zurich, Switzerland
Date de publication :
2003
ISBN :
3-905083-19-1
Mot(s)-clé(s) en anglais :
Disappearance
Elegy
English history
Poetry of 17th and 18th century
Epitaphs
Elegy
English history
Poetry of 17th and 18th century
Epitaphs
Discipline(s) HAL :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Littératures
Résumé en anglais : [en]
This article pinpoints the decisive moment of the two hundred year "life" of the poetic genre of the epitaph, with the context both of funerary monuments and social history in England. By following the history of epitaphic ...
Lire la suite >This article pinpoints the decisive moment of the two hundred year "life" of the poetic genre of the epitaph, with the context both of funerary monuments and social history in England. By following the history of epitaphic inscriptions, this article records the change in the relationship of the living and the dead from early modern England to what we would call our modernity. The dead, already disappeared but still among the living in early modern England, underwent a second and irrevocable disappearance once the value of the permanence of the dead succumbed to the value of the ephemerality of the living in a society based evermore on accelerating change and the privilege of the present over past and future.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >This article pinpoints the decisive moment of the two hundred year "life" of the poetic genre of the epitaph, with the context both of funerary monuments and social history in England. By following the history of epitaphic inscriptions, this article records the change in the relationship of the living and the dead from early modern England to what we would call our modernity. The dead, already disappeared but still among the living in early modern England, underwent a second and irrevocable disappearance once the value of the permanence of the dead succumbed to the value of the ephemerality of the living in a society based evermore on accelerating change and the privilege of the present over past and future.Lire moins >
Langue :
Anglais
Audience :
Internationale
Vulgarisation :
Non
Source :
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