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181. Mediaevalia: Volume > 26 > Issue: 2
Julie Candler Hayes Translation's Temporal Rhetoric: Pierre du Ryer and Le Quinte-Curce de Vaugelas
182. Mediaevalia: Volume > 26 > Issue: 2
Anne Paolucci How Many Have Been Deceived!
183. Mediaevalia: Volume > 26 > Issue: 2
Sif Rikhardsdottir Bound by Culture: A Comparative Study of the Old French and Old Norse Versions of La Chanson de Roland
184. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Claudio Bernardi Theatrum Pietatis: Images, Devotion, and Lay Drama
185. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Barbara De Marco, Sandro Sticca Preface: Performance and Traditions of Scholarship
186. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Thomas H. Bestul The Passion Meditations of Richard Rolle: The Latin Meditative Tradition and Implications for Authenticity
187. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Jody Enders Death by Dance
188. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Robert R. Edwards Performing Boccaccio's Questioni d'Amore
189. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Konrad Eisenbichler Saint or Politician?: The Ambivalence of the Converted in Lorenzo de' Medici's Rappresentazione di Santi Giovanni e Paolo
190. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Nerida Newbigin Mass Media: Visuauzing the Last Supper in Late Medieval Italian Plays
191. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Charlotte Stern Nativity Celebrations in Medieval Iberia: The Role of Fray Íñigo de Mendoza
192. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Paola Ventrone Between Acting and Literacy: On the Origins of Vernacular Italian Comedy
193. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 1
Elsa Strietman Show and Tell: Entertainment and Persuasion Tactics in Louris Jansz. of Haarlem's Vanden Afval Vant Gotsalige Weesen
194. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Joseph Carroll Conceptuauzing Cyning and Konungr in the Heimskringla and Beowulf
195. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Mary Dzon Margery Kempe's Ravishment Into the Childhood of Christ
196. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
John Mulryan, Steven Brown Venus and the Classical Tradition in Boccaccio's Genealogia Deorum Gentilium Libri and Natale Contfs Mythologiae
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This paper is a comparative study of the accounts of the goddess Venus in the Genealogia of Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375) and the Mythologiae of Natale Conti (1520?-1382?). Conti's superior knowledge of Greek, access to Greek sources unknown or incomprehensible to Boccaccio, easily accessible Latin prose style, and exceptional organizational skills, enabled him to create a richer, more extensive, and more accurate account of the goddess than Boccaccio could provide. Both Boccaccio and Conti escape from the binary, antithetical understanding of Venus that dominated medieval commentary. Conti focuses on the paradox of a beautiful goddess representing ugly things; Boccaccio's organizational scheme (based on a flawed genealogical chart originating with the supposed god Demogorgon) makes for a more disparate approach to symbolic interpretation, interesting in parts but thematically unfocused.
197. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Cristina Mourón-Figueroa Mel Gibson's the Passion of the Christ and the York Cycle: A Comparative Study of Violence as Dramatic Device
198. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Samuel Mareel For Prince and Townsmen: An Elegy by Anthonis De Roovere on the Death of Charles the Bold
199. Mediaevalia: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Elizabeth McLuhan Some New Light on an Early Medieval Missionary: The Life of St. Amand by Bernard Gui
200. Mediaevalia: Volume > 28 > Issue: 1
Véronique Plesch Words and Images in Late Medieval Drama and Art