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Kenneth R. Bartlett

Auteur de The Italian Renaissance

17 oeuvres 379 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Kenneth Bartlett is Professor of History and Renaissance Studies at the University of Toronto, Canada. He is a former President of the Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies, was the Founding Director of the University of Toronto Art Centre, and sat on the board at the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic afficher plus Art, and served as editor of Renaissance and Reformation Renaissance et Rforme. As a Renaissance specialist, he is author of numerous publications, including A Short History of the Italian Renaissance (2013). The Northern Renaissance and the Reformation (with Margaret McGlynn, 2013), and The Civilization of the Italian Renaissance (revised edition, 2011) Bartiett has produced several multi-part video series including The Smithsonian Essential Holy (2015), The Great Tours Experiencing Medieval Europe (2013). The Development of European Civilization (2010), and The Italian Renaissance (2005). He has published articles and conducted workshops in Europe. China, the Middle East, North American an university faculty development and pedagogy, and an 2005, he was awarded the prestigious 3M National Teaching Fellowship. afficher moins

Œuvres de Kenneth R. Bartlett

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1948
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Canada
Organisations
University of Toronto

Membres

Critiques

Bartlett is perhaps a little too fascinated by the inside of churches and by medieval walls, but his tour of 12 European cities will well-preserved medieval parts will have you wanting to visit nearly all of them--or perhaps move to Malta. Bartlett's narrative is well written and he is a good speaker. This is a more recent Teaching Company course, and the gee-whiz computer graphics, such as the professor standing on a map of the city he is talking about, are mostly quite effective. This is not a professor standing behind a lectern with a few pictures shown now and then; the depictions of city life are very well integrated and compelling. Definitely recommended. I used this as part of my daughter's home schooling.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
datrappert | Oct 1, 2020 |
This is the first Great Courses class I have ever listened to, and it was OK. After having it pounded into my head, I now understand the Guelphs vs the Ghibelines much better. I definitely learned a lot, but good lord there is a lot A LOT of info here. And I learned a lot, which was the goal. I also know I missed a lot because there is just soooo much

I did struggle with the professor's pronunciations. He is Canadian, and I am sure (OK, I know) thas is part of the issue and to others it wouldn't even matter. But. BUT. Given that this is audio only, this made it a very frustrating at times.

1. He pronounces "peninsula" as "peninchula". Is this Canadian? I had to take a break around lesson 19 because this was killing me. Needless to say, in a history course about Italy the word "peninsula" comes up fairly often.

2. Less familiar names (of people/title) are all pronounced with the Italian pronunciation. Commendatore, Cesare, etc. But he pronounces "Milan" as "MiLANN" (rhymes with can), which I think of as very midwestern so it must also be Canadian. Even google translate says the English pronunciation is "MilAHN" (very similiar to the Italian), which is what I
expect.

3. Other words are pronounced strictly in an English way. He says Genoese (Gen-oh-EEZ) rather than Gen-oh-VAY-zhay". He usually says "Mil-ahn-EEZ", but at least once he says "Mi-lahn-AY-zhay".
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Dreesie | Mar 7, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
17
Membres
379
Popularité
#63,709
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
2
ISBN
47

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