ellauri014.html on line 1557: ... But more importantly, these surroundings put Marino in direct contact with the natural philosophy of Della Porta and the philosophical systems of Giordano Bruno and Tommaso Campanella. While Campanella himself was to oppose "Marinism" (though not attacking it directly), this common speculative background should be borne in mind with its important pantheistic (and thus neo-pagan and heterodox) implications, to which Marino would remain true all his life and exploit in his poetry, obtaining great success amongst some of the most conformist thinkers on the one hand while encountering continual difficulties because of the intellectual content of his work on the other.
ellauri014.html on line 1584: But some witnesses, who include both Marino´s detractors (such as Tommaso Stigliani) and defenders (such as the printer and biographer Antonio Bulifoni in a life of the poet which appeared in 1699) have firmly asserted that Marino, much of whose love poetry is heavily ambiguous, had homosexual tendencies. Elsewhere, the reticence of the sources on this subject is obviously due to the persecutions to which "sodomitical practices" were particularly subject during the Counterreformation.
ellauri172.html on line 188: A Lisbona incontrò l'abate piemontese Tommaso Valperga di Caluso, che lo spronò a proseguire la sua carriera letteraria. Nel 1772 cominciò il viaggio di ritorno. Arrivò a Torino il 5 maggio 1772, indebolito e ammalato (forse di una patologia venerea da cui poi guarì).
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Tommaso Campanella


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Tommason frisyyristä tulee mieleen Haju Pisilä. Samanlaisia taisivat olla kusitolppia. Italia nousuun!

ellauri223.html on line 46: Käkättävä Sale luki Mexicossa kirjasta, johon oli koottu eri aikakausien unelmavaltioita eli utopioita. Niiden joukossa oli tää ennestään mulle tuntematon Tommaso. Kyllä sekin kuvitelma oli vitun dystooppista totalitarismia. Apinoiden planeetta muistutti termiittipesää enemmän kuin Tommason myöhemmän maanmiehen, bensa-aseman kattoon jalat alaspäin ripustetun, kärpästen vaivaaman Mussolinin pahimmissakaan painajaisissa.
ellauri223.html on line 48: Campanella, Tommaso: Aurinkokaupunki (La città del Sole, 1602), teoksessa Lahtinen, Mikko (toim.): Matkoja utopiaan. Suomentaneet Pia Mänttäri, Topi Makkonen, Petri Koikkalainen ja Tuukka Tomperi. Tampere: Vastapaino, 2002. ISBN 951-768-058-9.
ellauri223.html on line 50: Aurinkokaupunki (ital. La città del Sole, lat. Civitas Solis) on dominikaanifilosofi Tommaso Campanellan kirjoittama utopia. Se kirjoitettiin italiaksi vuonna 1602, hieman sen jälkeen kun Campanella oli vangittu harhaoppisuudesta ja kapinahengen lietsonnasta. Latinankielinen versio kirjoitettiin vuosina 1613–1614 ja julkaistiin Frankfurtissa vuonna 1623. Teos on yksi kirjallisuuden merkittävimmistä utopioista.
ellauri223.html on line 54: Teoksen viimeisessä osassa Campanella profetoi, astrologiaan verhotuin kielikuvin, että Espanjan kuninkaiden kohtalona on olla osa jumalallista suunnitelmaa paavien kanssa liittoutuneena. Seurauksena on oikean uskon lopullinen voitto ja leviäminen koko maailmaan. Voidaan helposti ajatella, että Campanella ajatteli lähinnä Uuden maailman valloitusta, mutta profetia on tulkittava myös Campanellan aiemmin kirjoittaman Espanjan monarkia -teoksen valossa. Tässä teoksessa Campanella esitti visionsa yhdistyneestä, rauhallisesta maailmasta, jota johtaisi teokraattinen monarkia. Poimin tähän Tommason parhaita paloja:
ellauri223.html on line 58: Although the community of wives is not instituted among the other inhabitants of their province, among them it is in use after this manner: All things are common with them, and their dispensation is by the authority of the magistrates. Arts and honors and pleasures are common, and are held in such a manner that no one can appropriate anything to himself. Hey Tommaso, hold your horses, the end of the line is over there!
ellauri223.html on line 117: Erittäinkin hyvä analogia! Mikäs heresia sanoikaan että paha on vain hyvän puutetta? Yrittämätöntä laitetaan. Se meni tässä ohi ihan hiljattain. Jaa eise ollutkaan kerettiläisyyttä, kerzen on siunannut virtahepo olohuoneessa, kz. seuraavaa paasausta. Tommason fiktiiviset porukat on samoilla linjoilla. No ei tässä sitten tämän enempää.
xxx/ellauri086.html on line 414: Gatti joutaisi panna säkkiin ja hukuttaa Napolin satama-altaaseen. Nähdä Napoli kuin sika säkistä ja kuolla. Samaan säkkiin vois laittaa italialaisen pranxterin Tommaso Debendettin.
xxx/ellauri354.html on line 267: Eventually Notari ended up as a fascist, founding the Milanese newspaper “L’Ambrosiano” in 1922, and was appointed to the very institutional “Accademia d’Italia”: just like another firebrand-turned-reactionary, the initiator of the Italian Futuristic movement Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, who, as a young, used to call for burning academies down... [signed] Enzo. The Black Pig is not a novel, as Enzo claims, but an energetic, apparently learned, vitriolic attack on the precepts and clergy of the Catholic Church.
xxx/ellauri354.html on line 271: In 1907, Notari (1878–1950) was already a best-selling journalist, polemicist, biographer, novelist, and dramatist. All told, he would write more than thirty books, in six of which he examines the position of women in society, most notably with a 1903 exegesis of prostitution in high and low places called Signore sole: Interviste con le più belle e le più celebri artiste (Single women: Interviews with the most beautiful and famous artists) that sold 21,000 copies and was denounced as immoral and obscene and taken to court, which inevitably increased its readership. It was followed by Quelle signore: Scene di una grande città moderna (Those women: Scenes of a great modern city; ca. 1904), which was set in a house of prostitution and whose main character, Ellere, was recognizably based on Notari’s good friend Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (1876–1944), an Egyptian-born Italian poet, editor, firebrand, and founder of the Futurist movement.
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