845 resultados para Leonardi, Giovanni
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Resumen: El trabajo se propone analizar la conceptualización del término “razón de Estado” en el teólogo piamontés Giovanni Botero a la luz de las teorías políticas de Carl Schmitt. En especial se hará hincapié en la aparición dentro del pensamiento de Botero de conceptos que luego Schmitt caracterizará como esenciales en la conformación del Estado Moderno, entre los cuales están el de soberanía, la idea del enemigo político, y la conformación de un orden frente a la existencia de un estado de excepción. Principalmente se busca usar estos conceptos schmittianos como marco teórico para entender cómo Botero intentó definir el concepto de “razón de Estado” frente a las problemáticas políticas, sociales y religiosas que se producían a fines del siglo XVI.
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Resumen: El presente trabajo busca analizar las ideas sobre el origen de la comunidad política en el teólogo católico piamontés del siglo XVI, Giovanni Botero. El propósito, en primer lugar, es intentar delinear cuáles pudieron haber sido las influencias de la Antigüedad clásica y de la Cristiandad medieval en este pensador, tratando de vislumbrar la conexión con las tendencias aristotélico-tomistas, por un lado y las latino-ciceronianas, por otro. Y en segundo término, asimismo se buscará dilucidar cómo, a partir de estas ideas, comienzan a aparecer en este pensador católico algunas referencias que demuestran, sino un quiebre, por lo menos una cierta variación en el pensamiento político, variación que puede compararse con los cuidados necesarios, con las clásicas teorías políticas modernas. El objetivo final se enmarca en proveer un primer acercamiento a una temática compleja que en estudios posteriores puede enfocarse desde perspectivas distintas a las clásicamente estudiadas: la temática del “tránsito” entre las ideas políticas medievales y modernas.
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Giovanni Battista Montano (1534-1621), who was born in Milan and trained as a woodcarver, relocated permanently to Rome in the early 1570s where his interest in sculpting was replaced by intense study of the city’s antique monuments and ruins. Although Montano carried out several sculptural and architectural projects during his time in Rome, it is his surviving corpus of drawings that testifies to his passion of exploring ancient architecture through the medium of drawing. While Montano was not famous during his lifetime, a large body of his intriguing designs became celebrated and widely circulated after his death thanks to the 1624 publication of Montano’s designs by his loyal pupil, Giovanni Battista Soria. Montano’s lifelong work differs from virtually all of his predecessors and contemporaries in its “fantastical” and ornamental nature. This thesis explores Montano’s artistic training as it relates to his later interest in imaginatively reconstructing antique buildings, along with his disregard for archaeological or historical accuracy. The subject matter upon which Montano focused is discussed, along with his objective in creating a large corpus of half-historical, half-invented drawings. His drawing techniques are explored with specific reference to the largest group of extant Montano drawings, today housed in Sir John Soane’s Museum, London, England, and also in reference to three original Montano drawings in the Centre Canadien d’Architecture/Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montréal. Also explored is the legacy and impact of Montano’s drawings and the later publications of his designs on the works of Roman Baroque architects, specifically Borromini and Bernini. This thesis ultimately attempts to understand the impact of the intellectual and artistic environment surrounding Montano in late sixteenth and early seventeenth century Rome, his drawing techniques, his choice of subject matter, and the reception that his unique works received from contemporary artists and intellectuals, along with those of the following generation.
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A brief account of Christian Gottlob Neefe's engagement with Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro and Don Giovanni as exemplified in his correspondence.