Publication Date:
2007
abstract:
The Renaissance writers adapted the dialogue form to represent the culture they were creating, using it for numerous subjects: philosophy, ethics, politics, religion, the arts, the study of language, and literature. The dialogue was an appropriate form for works which are at once serious, ironical, and critical. Giordano Bruno's Italian dialogues are a case in point. This essay scrutinizes the structure of these works, with special attention to the role of the interlocutors in his rhetoric.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Renaissance philosophy; Philosophical dialogue; Rhetoric
List of contributors:
Canone, Eugenio
Published in: