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    <title>Comédie de Dante</title>
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    <description>Termini degli indici</description>
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      <title>Spunti ‘alternativi’ sulla leggenda di Troia nella Commedia di Dante</title>
      <link>https://lodelpreprod.univ-rennes2.fr/atlantide/index.php?id=339</link>
      <description>Dans la Comédie de Dante, il y a plusieurs références à des versions ‘alternatives’ de la légende de Troie, datant probablement des récits de Dictys et Darès, qui sont bien connus et souvent cités au Moyen Âge. Troyens et Grecs apparaissent évidemment surtout dans l’Enfer, mais Hector, Énée et Penthésilée jouissent de la mélancolique destinée des Limbes. Dante semble suivre Darès et Dictys, en recourant parfois à des contaminations raffinées. In Dante’s Comedy there are several references to ‘alternative’ version of the Trojan legend, dating back to Dictys’ and Dares’ tales, which are well known and often mentioned in the Middle Ages. Trojans and Greeks, of course, are placed in the Hell; but Hector, Aeneas and Penthesilea share the melancholic fate of being in Limb. Dante seems to follow Dares and Dictys when his main models (Virgil, Ovide and Stace) do not talk about these characters and their deeds; sometimes he is able to realize narrative contructions that work very well. </description>
      <pubDate>mar., 26 nov. 2024 14:48:05 +0100</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>lun., 10 mars 2025 12:29:09 +0100</lastBuildDate>
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