Dido’s perception and articulation of time in the Carthage episode displays a refusal to accept the forweard-looking, progressive movement of linear time and a desire to regress to a state of primeval life where cultural bioudnaries and conventions, such as those eventually bound to doom her relationship with Aeneas, do not prevail. This articulation of time sets two world-visions on a collison course.
Under the Sign of Saturn: Dido's Kulturkampf: / Schiesaro, Alessandro. - (2005), pp. 85-110.
Under the Sign of Saturn: Dido's Kulturkampf:
SCHIESARO, ALESSANDRO
2005
Abstract
Dido’s perception and articulation of time in the Carthage episode displays a refusal to accept the forweard-looking, progressive movement of linear time and a desire to regress to a state of primeval life where cultural bioudnaries and conventions, such as those eventually bound to doom her relationship with Aeneas, do not prevail. This articulation of time sets two world-visions on a collison course.File allegati a questo prodotto
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