Benvenuti
| Venerdi 9 Maggio 2008 07:24 (Ora USA SLC) |
13th
and 14th Centuries
Italian Literature,
literature written in the Italian language from about the
13th century to the present.
Middle Ages
Before the 13th century the literary language of Italy was
Latin, which served for the writing of chronicles, historical
poems, heroic legends, lives of the saints, religious poems,
and didactic and scientific works. In addition to those who
wrote in Latin, a number of the early Italian poets wrote
in French or in Provençal, and borrowed most of their
verse forms and literary themes from foreign sources. One
of the most important verse forms was the Provençal
canzone. The literary themes included the deeds of ancient
heroes, of Arthurian knights, and of Charlemagne and his paladins.
The geste, or tales, of Charlemagne first appeared in a Franco-Venetian
vernacular and were later Italianized in Tuscany. Besides
attaining lasting popularity in Italy, the tales furnished
themes of chivalry for subsequent Italian poets.
13th and Early 14th Centuries
The earliest poetry written in Italian was that of the Sicilian
school connected with the German Hohenstaufen court of the
Italian-speaking Holy Roman emperor Frederick II and his son
Manfred. They chose to administer their far-flung empire mainly
from Sicily, which, partly under the impact of Arab civilization,
had become one of the chief cultural centers of 13th-century
Europe. The poetry of the Sicilian school, although written
in Italian, had otherwise no native quality. It was largely
a court type of love poetry, almost slavishly and often clumsily
imitative of the current Provençal models. The most
remarkable poets of the school were Giacomo Pugliese (flourished
about 1230-50) and Rinaldo d'Aquino.
After the fall of the Hohenstaufen dynasty in 1254, the center
of Italian poetry shifted to two cities, Arezzo, known for
the work of Guittone d'Arezzo, and Bologna, distinguished
by the innovations of Guido Guinizelli. Guittone d'Arezzo
and his followers produced little poetry of distinction. Guinizelli
was the creator of the dolce stil nuovo ("sweet new style").
In this style the poet did not exalt the worldly, fashionable
type of love cultivated in the courts of princes, as in Provençal
and Sicilian love poetry. He wrote instead of a Platonic love
relationship, in which the loveliness of the adored woman
spiritualized the lover, lifting his soul to a comprehension
of divine beauty. The greatest of Italian poets, Dante Alighieri,
who had a high regard for Guinizelli, wrote his first book,
La vita nuova (1292; The New Life, 1861), in the new style.
In prose narrative interspersed with lyrics, Dante described
his idealized love for his beloved, Beatrice. Dante and the
other poets of the dolce stil nuovo, notably Guido Cavalcanti
and Cino da Pistoia, made it one of the great schools of Italian
poetry.
Meanwhile another native, original type of poetry had appeared,
a devotional poetry inspired by St. Francis of Assisi, whose
Canto dell' amore (Canticle of Creatures) sings of love for
all of God's creation rather than for any single human being.
The same feeling was expressed in a collection of legends
in verse, Fioretti (Little Flowers), based on the life of
St. Francis. Other Franciscan poets followed in the 13th century,
among them a poet with a Dantesque imagination, Jacopone da
Todi, among whose beautiful hymns are the famous "Our
Lady of the Passion" and "Stabat Mater."
Dante is one of the great figures of world literature. He
is remarkable for the loftiness of his thought, the vividness
and fluency of his verse, and the boldness of his imagination.
He was one of the founders of Italian literature through his
use of the vernacular for some of his greatest works. About
1304 he wrote in Latin De Vulgari Eloquentia (Concerning the
Common Speech), in which he advocated the use of Italian as
a literary language.
Dante mastered the knowledge of his time and stands out as
the greatest interpreter of the ideals of medieval Europe.
His Convivio (The Banquet), written during the first years
of the 14th century, is an almost encyclopedic summary of
European culture. To his scholarship Dante added experience
drawn from a varied and active civic life. He served as a
magistrate of Florence and took part in the political controversies
of the time. His political convictions, for which he suffered
exile, are expressed plainly in his Latin treatise on government,
De Monarchia (circa 1313); in this work he projected enlightened
imperial rule as the ideal system in which multiple conflicting
states would be absorbed in one, church and state would be
separated, and justice would be founded on Roman law.
Dante's greatest work is his epic poem La divina commedia
(The Divine Comedy), probably begun about 1307, and written
in the vernacular for the sake of full and direct communication.
It is a dramatization of medieval philosophy and theology
partly in terms of the controversies and personalities of
13th- and 14th-century Italy. In some respects it is a literary
guided tour through the three worlds of medieval theology:
hell, purgatory, and paradise. Dante's guides are Beatrice,
the object of his chaste adoration, and the Roman poet Vergil.
Renaissance
The Renaissance in Italy was a period of expanding economic,
political, and cultural activity. The towns and cities emerged
from feudal conditions to become centers of commerce and industry.
City leaders struggled constantly to increase their power
by conquest and by establishing spheres of influence. Some
city-states, such as Venice and Genoa, won control of Mediterranean
empires. The period was marked by a rebirth of culture based
on the discovery of ancient manuscripts and the reevaluation
of classical literature and philosophy, which spread eventually
throughout Europe.
Many of the great figures of early Renaissance literature
were scholars concerned with philological research into and
the translation of the Greek and Latin classics. They were
called humanists because of their interest in human rather
than otherwordly ideals, as opposed to the scholars and thinkers
of the Middle Ages. Many humanists turned for inspiration
to the works of Plato in preference to those of his pupil
Aristotle, who was the dominant influence in medieval scholarship.
Late 14th Century
One of the most important figures of the early Renaissance
was the humanist scholar and poet Petrarch. With him a new
feeling entered Western culture. Unlike Dante and other medieval
thinkers such as the Italian Scholastic philosopher Thomas
Aquinas and the French philosopher Peter Abelard, Petrarch
was not concerned so much with using the material of the ancient
classical writers for his own purposes as with acting in the
classical spirit. A great Latinist, he helped to restore classical
Latin as a literary and scholarly language and to discredit
the use of medieval Latin, which had served as an international
medium of communication. After this period Latin lost currency
as a spoken tongue.
Petrarch is often referred to as the "modern man"
because of his interest in individuality; his Vita Solitaria
(1480; Solitary Life, 1924) and his De Remediis Utriusque
Fortunae (1468; Physicke Against Fortune, 1579) are considered
the first essays to express this new attitude. He has been
called also the first Italian nationalist, as contrasted with
Dante, who was a universalist and for whom Italy was a part
to be fitted into an imperial whole. To Petrarch, Italy was
the heir and successor of ancient Rome, the civilizing mission
of which he glorified in his Latin epic Africa (critical edition,
1926), dealing with the Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage.
He believed that the various states of Italy should be united
to resume the mission of ancient Rome.
Impressive as were Petrarch's contributions to classical
scholarship, his greatness rests on his Italian lyrics. His
Canzoniere (after 1327; trans. 1777)—a collection of sonnets
addressed to Laura, probably the Frenchwoman Laure de Noves,
the counterpart of Dante's Beatrice—departs from the idealized
approach of the dolce stil nuovo. It introduced an intensity
and inwardness of feeling and perception heretofore unknown
in European poetry.
Boccaccio, like Petrarch, was conscious of belonging to a
new age. He was strongly influenced by Petrarch, and the two
men became close friends. Boccaccio had a strong narrative
bent, as evidenced by his prose romances Il Filocolo (circa
1336) and L'amorosa Fiammetta (Amorous Fiammetta, c. 1343).
Boccaccio's greatest work is his Decamerone (1353; The Decameron,
1620), a masterpiece in which he drew directly from life instead
of from literary models. It is a collection of 100 short stories
presumed to have been told during a period of ten days by
seven gentlemen and three ladies of Florence living in a remote
country villa in which they had taken refuge from an epidemic
of the plague.
Unlike Petrarch, Boccaccio valued Dante highly; his last
work was a biography and a series of lectures on the work
of the great poet. Boccaccio's writings gained an international
public and were drawn upon for plots and characters by writers
in other countries. For example, his epic poem La Teseida
(c. 1341) was used by the 14th-century English poet Geoffrey
Chaucer as the basis for his "Knight's Tale" and
by the 17th-century English poet John Dryden in his poem "Palamon
and Arcite."
Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio were the first Italian writers
to make literary use of the Tuscan dialect spoken in Florence,
Siena, and other towns of north-central Italy, and they won
for it general acceptance as the language of culture.
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