Utopia ha un volto di donna nel canzoniere di Fabrizio De André = Utopia has a woman's face in Fabrizio de Andrè's songbook
Andrea Cannas
2023-01-01
Abstract
It is a widespread but misleading commonplace that the prostitute is one of the most recurrent figure in Fabrizio De André’s songbook. This is because a substantial part of his audience falls into the same common-sense prejudice that the songwriter intends to overcome: a woman devoted to free love should not be considered a whore. In reality De André’s great characters of free women, such as Bocca di Rosa or her reincarnation Jamin-a, exalt the revolutionary virtues of love and are therefore allegorical figures of Utopia. Here lies the sky-high narrative value that must be attributed to their stories.File | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|
Utopia ha un volto di donna.pdf Solo gestori archivio
Type: versione post-print
Size 123.49 kB
Format Adobe PDF
|
123.49 kB | Adobe PDF | & nbsp; View / Open Request a copy |
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.