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Liceo Classico Scientifico Linguistico

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Title: Liceo Classico Scientifico Linguistico


1
Liceo Classico Scientifico Linguistico Gerolamo
BagattaDesenzano del GardaClasse IA Classico
  • Dedicated to Gigi Febo
  • Our work
  • Vampires
  • Werewolves
  • Witches

2
A wingsbeat in the night the figure of vampire
and his ancestors in the classical world
  • Definition. Theory hypothesis about the origin of
    vampire
  • Vampires ancestors in the greek and latin
    literature
  • Following developments
  • The vampire in the modern literature
  • Vampires at the movie

3
Definition. Theory hypothesis about the origin of
vampire.
  • The vampire is a malicious strength that lives in
    certain hours of the night. He increases his
    energy and he is obliged to feed on blood. As a
    matter of fact as far back as the remote age
    blood has been considerated life-holder.
  • Historians arent sure about vampires origin
    place and age.
  • Here it is a list of probable origins of vampire
  • Universal or Prehistorical
  • Shamanic
  • Oriental
  • Ancient Europe o Midde Age
  • Modern

4
Vampires anchestors in the greek
and latin literature We know that
vampire is a determinant figure from the
literature of the nineteeth century and from
Stoker. It is possible to find his features in
the greek-roman world. In the classical
literature the figure of a living dead, who wakes
up in the night to suck blood, doesnt exist.
There are many examples of living deads and
numerous mythological female beings that feed on
blood and human flesh, above all children
(Lamiae, Empusai, Striges strongly related to
Lilith). Relate some fragments of the ancient
literature that refer to supernatural beings or
beings with vampire characteristics
  • Flegone Tralliano, De Mirabilibus et longaevis
    libellus
  • Filostrato, Vita di Apollonio di Tiana IV,25
  • Ovidio, Fasti VI, 131-168
  • Petronio, Satyricon, 63
  • Apuleio, Metamorfosi, I, 11,4-8,12-13, 19
  • Orazio, Epodo 5

5
Following developments
  • So called Protovampires ancestors and
    putative vampires father from the end of the
    ancient age to the nineteenth century.
  • The myth of vampire takes place and
    consolidates in the Christian west from Middle
    Age through Renaissanse until modern age.
  • Since Middle Age until Modern Age the vampire,
    as we know him, became popular in the Middle
    Europe and Balkan area. Two important and certain
    ancestors can be found in this area Vrikolakas
    and Nachzvehrer.

6
Vampire in the modern literature
  • Goethe, Keats and Baudelaire dedicated poems to
    the vampire such as Bürger , Southey and
    Gautier.
  • John William Polidori wrote a novel called The
    vampire.
  • Goethe and keats, in a atmosfere of classical
    and neoromantic poetry, refered to the figure of
    Empusae such as handed on by greek and latin
    literature, especially by Filostrato and Flegone
    Tralliano. In Coleridge and Goethe the
    contribution from classical literature was
    contaminated with the slav tales. In Baudelaire
    the leitmotif of vampire-woman is very strong.
    The first steps towards a modern treatment of
    vampire figure is represented by the novel of
    Polidori. Nodier and Dumas wrote tragedies
    inspired by the figure of a dead that comes back.
  • The most diffused figure in the modern poetry
    and literature is the vampire. The literary and
    cinematographic vampire for antonomasia is
    Dracula by Bram Stoker.

7
Vampires at the movie
  • Silent movie
  • Beginnings
  • The Forties
  • A look to the world
  • English movies
  • The big productions Hammer and A.I.P.
  • Episodicals movies
  • The Comedy
  • The Seventies
  • The Psychoanalytical aspect
  • The Vampire
  • The Nineties
  • Famous vampires

8
WerewolvesVersipellis, werewolf, loup-Garou
  • The werewolf between classical civilization and
    modern world.
  • Definition and origin
  • Classical Literature
  • Germanic Literature
  • The Middle Age
  • Modern Literature
  • Movies

9
Definition and origin of werewolf
  • Definition. Differences among werewolf,
    lycanthrope and wolf-man.
  • Defence against werewolf
  • From Shaman to the rejected the origins of the
    myth
  • Men and werewolves
  • Transformations in other animals

10
Werewolf in the classical literature
  • In the classical world the figure of wolf first
    has a positive valence of adoration, as one of
    the most eclectic power of animals world
    (Lupercalias party), but in the passage from
    nomad and hunter cultures to agricultural
    cultures the polarity of this relatioship
    changes. The negative valuation of ancestral
    Arcadian cultus of wolf is a clear sign with
    Ovidio and Plinio il Vecchio.
  • Meanwhile, as the famous episode of Satyricon
    shows, a folk connotation of the werewolf is
    genereted. At the end of ancient age S.Agostino
    retook the question.
  • Ovidio, Metamorfosi I, 209-239
  • Petronio, Satyricon 61_62
  • Plinio il Vecchio, Naturalis Historia, VIII
    passim
  • S. Agostino, De Civitate Dei, XVIII, 17 ss.

11
The werewolf in the germanic literature
  • In the germanic world, before Christianity
    Advent, the admiration for the overbearing animal
    power of the bear and wolf let us believe that
    the existence of prodigious wolf-warriors
    (ulfednar) or bear-men (berserker) that wearing
    the mortal remains of these animals, they go
    through a totem transformation, resisting to the
    sufferings, indomitable wildly strong men.
  • This situation, testified by late Medieval Sagas,
    endes when the Christianity Advent brings terror
    or the ridiculous on the ancient faiths.
  • Olaus Magnus, Historia de Gentibus
    Septentrionalibus
  • Saga di Egil-Skalla Grimmson
  • Saga dei Volsunghi

12
The werewolf in the Medieval literature
  • The end of Middle Age opens a period of big
    wolf-huntings.
  • Even at first the real faith in werewolf or the
    superstition that a big wolf can eat the moon is
    discouraged ( for example Bucardo di Worms or
    Rabano Mauro), in the wolfs rapresentations such
    as Roman di Renard, the wild animal is
    represented like a brutal and stupid strength
    (Ysengrin) in comparison with astuteness (
    Renart) but in the bestiaries and preaching the
    image of wolf as vorax and the hypostasis of
    malicious makes itself known. At same time the
    folk image, presented by Petronio, spread slowly.
    On the others side, in different texts of
    medieval literature ( Bisclaveret, Biclarel,
    Melion, Artù e Gorlagon), the lycanthrope appears
    like a betrayed husband whose wife finds out his
    secret, but under kings protection he
    restablishes his rights as a mild wolf.
  • In many other cases the character appears as a
    victim without emphasizing his wildness and
    cruelty.

13
The werewolf in the modern literature
  • The werewolf, from a literary point of view,
    isnt successful due to literary myth of vampire.
  • Nevertheless, beginning from the serial Wagner
    the Wher-wolf by G.Reynolds (1546-47), a fairly
    good vampire literature comes out, in which
    writers like Dumas, Kipling, Maupassant, Merinee
    and the fantasy master Williamson are
    undertoken, moving between traditional images and
    new sugestions.
  • Italian literature offers texts of variable
    suggestions the traditional approach to the
    fable (Capuana), the south folklore (Pirandello)
    and a stimulating different meditation about the
    acient myth of Licaone (Pavese).

14
The werewolf on the movie
  • The vampire is aristocrat, charming and sure of
    himself but the werewolf on the movie is unhappy
    and pathetic. He wouldnt do evil but he cannot
    avoid his destiny.
  • From the heroic times of Lon Chaney jr. until An
    american werewolf in London by John Landis and
    Wolf with the great Jack Nicholson the movie has
    reinvented the werewolf.
  • The dead given by a silver bullet and a sign to
    primitive insticts (flesh and sexuality) have
    been introduced in the popular imaginary thanks
    to the movies.
  • The myth of lycanthrope is more diffused at the
    movie than literature (in fact the figure doesnt
    have solid basis, even its very strong in the
    folklore) unlike vampire. The dualism good and
    evil, instinct and ratio, the monster victim of
    himself has genereted many interpretations. At
    the movie the lycanthrope always is delighted of
    his animality and he uses it to get material and
    sexual satisfation a metaphor about survival of
    stronger man typical of our ambiguous times,
    incertain between goodness and egoism. In some
    adaptations he isnt more solitary but he belongs
    to a proper class with a big consciousness.
    Today the lycanthrope appears the more classic
    monster for a undecided society about faiths and
    values, he is able to adapt himself to more and
    more to present metamorphosis.

15
From Circe to Blue Eyes histories of witches and
black magic from Omero to modern literatures
  • Black magic in Greece and Rome between chronicle
    and literature
  • Birth and development of real witchcraft The
    magic fly and the unguent..
  • Images of witches in the modern literatures
  • Witches in the art
  • and at the movie
  • Something of our

16
Black magic in Greek and Rome between chronicle
and literature
  • The type of magic in the greek and roman world.
    Nice magic. Why black magic?
  • Nomenclature of magic operators.
  • The black practice defixiones and magic
    papyrus.
  • Magic in greek and roman literature.
  • __Teocrito, Idillio II
  • __Apollonio Rodio, Medea IV 1635-1690
  • __ Virgilio, Ecloga VIII, 64-109 Eneide IV
    450-521
  • __ Orazio, Epodo 5 Satira I, 8
  • __ Seneca, Tragedies
  • __ Lucano, Bellum civile IV
  • __ Tacito, Annales II, 69_70

17
Ancient aspects of medieval witchcraft
  • Some historical cue of witchcraft such as we
    understand it
  • The magic fly
  • The witches unguent

18
Figures of witches in the modern literature
  • Decamerone
  • The Celestina
  • Machbeth
  • Faust
  • The Master and Daisy
  • The crucible

19
Witches in the artWitches at the movie
  • A very small route and gallery of works relative
    to the witch subject on the cloth and on the
    movie.

20
Something of our
  • Annas colours in the witches universe
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