Hermes' Lyre
Italian Poetic Self-Commentary from Dante to Tommaso Campanella
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Toronto Press
Published:7th Dec '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
'An excellent piece of scholarship ... [that] identifies a literary genre - that of self-commentary - more precisely and profoundly than has been the case with previous critics, defines it in an original manner ... and offers insightful readings of the texts. Impeccably written.' -- Olga Pugliese, Department of Italian Studies, University of Toronto
Through numerous examples, Roush highlights the non-linear development of this mixed genre, and shows how poetic self-commentaries respond to unique literary, historical, and political exigencies, and offer keys to understanding the underlying poetic message.
From the mysterious glosses by 'EK' in the poetry of Edmund Spenser, to the self-commentary in Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire, readers of literature have been fascinated by the comments, addenda, and footnotes added by authors to their own work. In this insightful and original work, Sherry Roush investigates poets' motivations for writing glosses. She argues that self-commentary differs fundamentally from standard commentary, and that it does not necessarily impose an authoritative reading, determine the poem's significance, or furnish factual autobiographical information. Rather, self-commentary presents an intriguing ulterior poetic dimension and adds to the inherent tension of the text.
Roush focuses her study on three pairs of authors, each representing a distinct historical-contextual period: Dante and Boccaccio in the early Italian self-commentative tradition, Lorenzo de' Medici and Girolamo Benivieni in high Renaissance Florence, and Giordano Bruno and Tommaso Campanella at the turn of the seventeenth century. Through numerous examples, Roush highlights the non-linear development of this mixed genre, and shows how poetic self-commentaries respond to unique literary, historical, and political exigencies, and offer keys to understanding the underlying poetic message. This seminal study will be of particular value to scholars interested in poetry, hermeneutics, autobiography, and Renaissance studies.
ISBN: 9780802037121
Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 28mm
Weight: 556g
240 pages