Buch, Englisch, Band 6, 338 Seiten, Gewicht: 766 g
Reihe: Intersections
Buch, Englisch, Band 6, 338 Seiten, Gewicht: 766 g
Reihe: Intersections
ISBN: 978-90-04-14766-9
Verlag: Brill
Petrarch, the “father of Humanism”, has exerted a striking impact on early modern intellectuals. This volume discusses how Petrarch’s writings were understood, read and used by intellectuals, writers and artists from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century. Specialists from various disciplines (Italian, French, Neo-Latin, Dutch, art history, history of science) demonstrate that early modern reception is an extremely variable phenomenon; that it is largely dominated by the various discourses, paradigm’s, literary genres, interests, needs and experiences of the users, and to a much lesser degree by the author’s text, even if safeguarded with such great care and by such a famous author as in Petrarch’s case. The volume is important for all scholars interested in literature, Humanism, Renaissance Studies, Petrarch, reception, history of reading and the intellectual history of the early modern period.
Contributors include: Jean Balsamo, Dóra Bobory, Dina De Rentiis, Ugo Dotti, Karl A.E. Enenkel, Reindert L. Falkenburg, Ursula Kocher, Marc Laureys, Reinier Leushuis, Jan Papy, Paul J. Smith, and Bart Van den Bossche.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Acknowledgements
Notes on the Editors of this Volume
List of Contributors
Introduction: Towards a New Approach of Petrarch’s Reception in the Renaissance—the ‘Independent Reader’, Karl A.E. Enenkel & Jan Papy
PETRARCH AND HIS 14TH-CENTURY READERS
1. Creating an ‘Italian’ Friendship: from Petrarch’s Ideal Literary Critic ‘Socrates’ to the Historical Reader Ludovicus Sanctus of Beringen, Jan Papy
2. Antiquarianism and Politics in 14th-century Avignon: the Humanism of Giovanni Cavallini, Marc Laureys
3. „Interpres rerum tuarum“—Boccaccio und Petrarca, eine ungleiche Freundschaft, Ursula Kocher
4. Petrarch in Bohemia: Culture and Civil Life in the Correspondence between Petrarch and Johann von Neumarkt, Ugo Dotti
PETRARCH IN 16TH-CENTURY GERMANY: THE CASE OF THE ‘PETRARCH MASTER’
5. Der Petrarca des ,Petrarca-Meisters‘: zum Text-Bild-Verhältnis in illustrierten De remediis-Ausgaben, Karl A.E. Enenkel
6. Speculative Imagery in Petrarch’s Von der Artzney bayder Glueck (1532), Reindert L. Falkenburg
16TH-CENTURY ITALIANS READING PETRARCH: BEMBO AND CARDANO
7. 'Quegli amori che son dolci senza amaritudine': the Petrarchist Bembo in The Book of the Courtier, Bart Van den Bossche
8. An Unusual Biography: Cardano’s Horoscope of Petrarch, Dóra Bobory
PETRARCH READ AND IMITATED IN 16TH-CENTURY FRANCE
9. Visions of Ruin: vanitas vanitatum in Du Bellay’s Songe and Petrarch’s Canzone delle visioni (Rime 323), Reinier Leushuis
10. Truth is Just an Option: Du Bellay’s Philosophical Critique of Imitation in Contre les Pétrarquistes, Dina De Rentiis
11. Poetical and Political Readings of Petrarch’s Rime in XVIth-Century France: A Critical Revaluation, Jean Balsamo
PETRARCH TRANSLATED AND ILLUSTRATED IN THE LOW COUNTRIES
12. Petrarch Translated and Illustrated in Jan van der Noot’s Theatre (1568), Paul J. Smith
List of Illustrations
Index Nominum