Author Archives: KAmbroziak
“Don Quixote” by Miguel de Cervantes
Dave Warren’s concept art for Terry Gilliam’s Don Quixote Illustration by Gustave Doré Illustration by Gustave Doré An important predecessor of the later novel was the picaresque narrative, which emerged in sixteenth-century Spain … “Picaro” is Spanish for “rogue,” and a typical story … Continue reading
Monday, May 11th Presentations
Peace-Burial at Sea (1842) by Joseph Mallord William Turner Prospero by John Bramblitt
Thursday, May 7th Presentations
The Voyage of Life: Manhood (1842) by Thomas Cole Pietà (1497-1500) by Michelangelo
Montaigne “Essays”
The word “essay” stems from the French word “essayer,” which means to attempt or try something out. Montaigne’s Essays comprises 107 essays written in a didactic style to engage the reader, though he insists his work is for domestic and private … Continue reading
Wednesday, May 6th Presentations
The Fall of the Rebel Angels (1562) by Pieter Bruegel the Elder Barge Haulers on the Volga (1870-3) by Ilya Repin Mona Lisa with Bazooka Rocket by Banksy
Monday, May 4th Presentations
On set for “In Voluptas Mors” (1951) with Salvador Dali – photograph by Philippe Halsman The Wave or My Destiny (1857) by Victor Hugo Geopoliticus Child Watching the Birth of the New Man (1943) by Salvador Dali
Thursday, April 30th Presentations
The Face of War (1940) by Salvador Dali
Wednesday, April 29th Presentations
Joel Velis
Tuesday, April 28th Presentations
Stanczyk (1862) by Jan Matejko Roberta’s Image
Renaissance Humanism, Satire and Utopia
From Abrams and Harpham, “A Glossary of Literary Terms” Renaissance humanism assumed the dignity and central position of human beings in the universe; emphasized the importance in education of studying classical imaginative and philosophical literature, although with emphasis on its moral and … Continue reading