|
Of oaten flutes and magic potions: Montemayor's Diana as pastoral romance.(Critical Essay)
From:
Narrative
| Date:
October 1, 2002| Author:
Schneider, Regina
| COPYRIGHT 2002 Ohio State University Press. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.Copyright information
|
The importance of Jorge de Montemayor's Siete Libros de la Diana for the development of novelistic writing in Western Europe has variously been pointed out; evidence to its instant popularity with readers and writers alike is furnished by the large number of editions that appeared in various languages in the decades following its first publication around 1559. (1) The reasons for its success were probably manifold and explanations have been attempted. Carroll B. Johnson, for exampl...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Of oaten flutes and magic potions: Montemayor's Diana as pastoral romance.(Critical Essay)
Narrative
; The importance of Jorge de Montemayor's Siete Libros de la Diana for the development of novelistic writing in Western Europe has variously been pointed out; evidence to its instant popularity with readers and writers alike is furnished by the large number of editions that appeared in various
|
|
Diana had freaked out. 'Suppose it's a girl,' she said. She was distraught but knew what she had to do An extraordinary new biography of Princess Diana reveals for the first time the tragic price she paid for her relentless pursuit of men, PART ONE OF THE MOST SENSATIONAL BOOK OF THE YEAR, REVIEW
Mail on Sunday
; By 1993, 12 years after her marriage to Charles, the popular image of Diana, the virginal Princess, had been shattered. Separated from her husband after scandals involving her lovers James Hewitt and James Gilbey, Diana was marginalised and alone. There was one bright spot in her life, however.
|
|
Diana had freaked out. 'Suppose it's a girl,' she said. She was distraught but knew what she had to do; An extraordinary new biography of Princess Diana reveals for the first time the tragic price she paid for her relentless pursuit of men, PART ONE OF THE MOST SENSATIONAL BOOK OF THE YEAR, REVIEW.
The Mail on Sunday (London, England)
; Byline: LADY COLIN CAMPBELL By 1993, 12 years after her marriage to Charles, the popular image of Diana, the virginal Princess, had been shattered. Separated from her husband after scandals involving her lovers James Hewitt and James Gilbey, Diana was marginalised and alone. There was one bright
|
|
All things to all women: why Diana meant so much to us
The Independent - London
; Diana, Princess of Wales was many things to many people. A week on from her death, that much is clear, whatever else is not. She was the Children's Princess according to an item on the BBC, she was the Gay Princess wrote Ned Sherrin in the Evening Standard, she was Princess to the poor, the sick
|
|
SEVEN STAGES IN THE LIFE OF DIANA.(Features)
The People (London, England)
; ... with her first child, Jane Lucas read the news with more excitement than most. I was pregnant ... hospital Jane read the papers and watched the news as the Prince and Princess proudly showed ... otherwise might have done. For Deborah, the news of Diana's death was especially hard to ...
|
|
Rite of passage The mass mourning was extraordinary. But what, to a historian, did Diana's death reveal about the British?
The Independent - London
; THE WEEK before Princess Diana's funeral and the funeral itself were, it is generally agreed, a remarkable moment in the history of modern Britain, but most of us, despite broadsheet press commentary which was frequently sensible and thoughtful, have found it difficult to understand or even to know
|
|
Diana Plans Comeback On Behalf of Charities
Chicago Sun-Times
; LONDON Princess Diana is "coming back with a vengeance," she is quoted as telling friends in excerpts published in the Sunday Times from Diana: Her New Life, the second volume of her biography by Andrew Morton. That means a new high-profile charity role, reports said, nearly two years after
|
|
Conspiracy, cruelty and compassion: my search for Diana's real legacy THE SPIRIT OF DIANA: Concluding our compelling series by the Mail's award-winning writer, once a critic of the Princess
Daily Mail
; SO THIS is where a great 20th-century fairy tale finally ended. Like thousands of others since Diana's death, I found myself peering over the concrete balustrade which overlooks the underpass at the Pont d'Alma. It is covered with spidery graffiti in several languages: 'We will always miss you,
|
|
Conspiracy, cruelty and compassion: my search for Diana's real legacy; THE SPIRIT OF DIANA: Concluding our compelling series by the Mail's award-winning writer, once a critic of the Princess.
The Daily Mail (London, England)
; Byline: ANN LESLIE SO THIS is where a great 20th-century fairy tale finally ended. Like thousands of others since Diana's death, I found myself peering over the concrete balustrade which overlooks the underpass at the Pont d'Alma. It is covered with spidery graffiti in several languages: 'We will
|
|
Revealed...charity queen Diana's plan to take over world.(News)
Sunday Mirror (London, England)
; ... concerned many charities would not want her when she lost her HRH title. Last night charities ditched by Diana were surprised by this news. The British Red Cross said her title had never been an issue . Help The Aged said: It wouldn't have made any difference. She ...
|