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- Q1841379 subject Q8210564.
- Q1841379 subject Q8671359.
- Q1841379 subject Q8723850.
- Q1841379 abstract "Template:ForThe Gradiva, The woman who walks, has become a modern 20th century mythological figure. As she has sprung out of the imagination of a fictional character she may be considered unreal twice over. The fictional character in question is a young archaeologist, the protagonist of a novella by the German writer Wilhelm Jensen: Gradiva: Ein pompejanisches Phantasiestück (Gradiva: A Pompeiian Fancy. 1903). He is fascinated by a female figure in an antique bas-relief and gives her the name ‘Gradiva’ after Mars Gradivus, the Roman god of war walking into battle; later, not quite certain whether he is awake or dreaming he meets her in the ruins of Pompeii.Sigmund Freud famously analysed the actions and dreams of this young archaeologist in his study: Der Wahn und die Träume in W. Jensens Gradiva (1907). Through this study Freud not only saved the novella from being forgotten but caused the Gradiva to become a modern mythical figure.The relief itself is not fictional but exists; it is now known by the name of „Gradiva“. The relief was described by Hauser (1903) as a neo-Attic Roman bas-relief, probably after a Greek original from the 4th century BCE. It shows in its complete state the three Agraulides sisters Herse, Pandrosos und Aglaulos, deities of the dew. Hauser reconstructed the Agraulid-relief from fragments scattered over various museum collections. The Gradiva fragment is held in the collection of the Vatican Museum Chiaramonti, Rome, its complement in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence.".
- Q1841379 thumbnail Gradiva-p1030638.jpg?width=300.
- Q1841379 wikiPageExternalLink MCMs_Sala01_02.html.
- Q1841379 wikiPageExternalLink gradiva-the-cure-through-love.
- Q1841379 wikiPageExternalLink 67734.
- Q1841379 wikiPageExternalLink carasco_gravida.html.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q112.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q132151.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q1429238.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q1455777.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q161955.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q16641710.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q167863.
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- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q3113122.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q39427.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q43332.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q462591.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q464056.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q51252.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q5577.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q584492.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q5912.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q633120.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q66016.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q8210564.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q8671359.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q8723850.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q9215.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q937773.
- Q1841379 wikiPageWikiLink Q993643.
- Q1841379 comment "Template:ForThe Gradiva, The woman who walks, has become a modern 20th century mythological figure. As she has sprung out of the imagination of a fictional character she may be considered unreal twice over. The fictional character in question is a young archaeologist, the protagonist of a novella by the German writer Wilhelm Jensen: Gradiva: Ein pompejanisches Phantasiestück (Gradiva: A Pompeiian Fancy. 1903).".
- Q1841379 label "Gradiva".
- Q1841379 depiction Gradiva-p1030638.jpg.