Benvenuti
| Martedi 18 Novembre 2008 23:07 (Ora USA SLC) |
17th and 18th Centuries
17th Century
The predominant style of the 17th century, not only in literature
but in the fine arts and music, was baroque, that is, characterized
by exuberant and often somber emotion. Poetry and drama became
extravagant in imagination, rhetorical in expression, and
richly metaphorical in imagery.
Typical of the century in this respect is the poetry of Giambattista
Marino, whose Adone (Adonis, 1623) is a masterpiece of literary
virtuosity. A remarkable study of the universality of love,
it masks sense under sentiment and discovers amorous tendencies
in all nature.
Much of the writing of the period is morbid in spirit. Representative
of this genre are the tragedies of Federigo della Valle, whose
La reina di Scotia (The Queen of Scotland, 1628) centers on
the trials of Mary, queen of Scots. A dissatisfaction with
life, especially with the social order of his time, is expressed
in the work of the poet, scientist, and philosopher Tommaso
Campanella, whose speculations about ways of improving society
cost him imprisonment and exile. His most important work is
Civitas solis (City of the Sun, 1623), which he wrote in prison.
It is a utopian vision of an egalitarian state maintained
by careful regulation.
18th Century
Toward the end of the 17th century a movement arose in opposition
to the affectations and unrestraint of the baroque style.
The principal exponents of this tendency belonged to Arcadia,
a society founded in Rome in 1690. In conformity with the
simplicity traditionally associated with the term Arcadian,
this group advocated a conscious naiveté of expression.The
Arcadian writers borrowed from classical sources, chiefly
from the Greek pastoral poets.
The outstanding Arcadian figure was the poet and dramatist
Pietro Metastasio, who became the court poet in Vienna, capital
of the Austrian emperors. He succeeded Apostolo Zeno, author
of dramas and opera librettos, and a pioneer literary critic
who was the cofounder (1710) of the first journal of criticism,
Giornale dei Letterati d'Italia (Journal of Italian Literature).
Metastasio's plays, such as Artaxerxes and Semiramis, are
remarkable for the melodic fluency of their lines. Several
were used as librettos for operas.
The influence of Arcadia is discernible in the comedies of
Carlo Goldoni, one of the great playwrights in Italian literature.
His best comedies include La locandiera (1753; The Mistress
of the Inn, 1856), Il ventaglio (1763; The Fan, 1911), and
Le baruffe chiozzotte (1760; Squabbles at Chioggia, 1914).
Goldoni's genius was at its best in rendering situations simply
and forcefully and in depicting the milieu from which his
characters derive their distinctive qualities.
According to some critics, Goldoni developed his style of
writing in reaction to the famed commedia dell'arte, or guild
comedy, which flourished from the 16th to the 18th century.
The guild comedy was based on routine comic situations, the
plot outlines of which were composed by wandering companies
of actors. The characters were fixed types called maschere
("masks"), such as Pantaloon, Harlequin, and Columbine;
the actors improvised the dialogues for different performances.
The most effective use of the guild-comedy style was made
by the dramatist Carlo Gozzi, who was opposed to Goldoni's
type of dramatic writing. Gozzi dramatized a number of popular
fairy tales, establishing a new form known as the fairy play.
Two of his plays later served as the basis for the operas
The Love for Three Oranges, by the 20th-century Soviet composer
Sergey Prokofiev, and Turandot, by the 19th-century Italian
composer Giacomo Puccini.
In its scientific and ethical aspects, Italian literature
was influenced during the 18th century by the ideas of the
17th-century French scientist and philosopher René
Descartes and by the writers of the 18th-century French Enlightenment.
The principal organ of Italian intellectual life, which was
centered in Milan, was the periodical Il Caffè (The
Coffeehouse, 1764-66). The most influential thinker of the
Enlightenment in Italy was the jurist Cesare Bonesana Beccaria,
who advocated humane treatment of prisoners and abolition
of capital punishment. An unfortunate result of the general
French influence was the infusion of French words and expressions
into Italian at a time when the language already was overladen
with Grecisms and Latinisms revived by the Arcadians. An important
counterinfluence was that of English literature and ideas,
which were popularized in Italy by the work of Giuseppe Baretti,
a resident of England for many years. His periodical Frusta
Letteraria (Literary Scourge, 1763-65) communicated English
cultural values through translations and informative articles.
The poets Giuseppe Parini and Vittorio Alfieri were among
those writers who reacted most vigorously and effectively
against excessive foreign influences, and strove to arouse
a sense of national pride and unity against foreign domination.
Parini is best known for his social satire in the mock-heroic
poem Il giorno (The Day), published in several parts between
1763 and 1801. He attacked by ridicule and irony the uselessness,
frivolity, and immorality of the aristocracy, and praised
in contrast the sober frugality of the working classes. Although
he strove to free his work from undue foreign influences,
the spirit of social indignation characteristic of Il giorno
is very much the same as that found in many French writings
that led to the French Revolution. In contrast, however, Parini
displayed greater moderation and respected the classical traditions
and the church.
Alfieri, whose autobiography describes one of the stormiest
and most romantic figures in literature, turned from a youthful
life of aristocratic self-indulgence to a mature life of vigorous
and prolific activity as a man of letters. Freedom was his
obsession and tyranny his favorite target, both in his treatises
and minor lyrics and in his famous tragedies. Except for Agamennone
(1783), Saul (1783), and Mirra (1787), his best-known plays,
such as Filippo (1781), have a strong political emphasis,
which earned them great popularity in the struggle for national
liberation that marked the following century.
Other important 18th-century writers are the literary critic
and archaeologist Lodovico Antonio Muratori and the philosopher
Giovanni Battista Vico, whose influence was revived by the
work of his 20th-century disciple Benedetto Croce. In his
Principii d'una scienza nuova (Principles of a New Science,
1725), Vico attacked the Cartesian concept of body and mind
as separate entities, propounded a cyclical view of history,
and anticipated the romantics' interest in the past.
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