Unlikely Exemplars

Reading and Imitating beyond the Italian Canon in French Renaissance Poetry

Joann Dellaneva author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Rowman & Littlefield

Published:1st Oct '09

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Unlikely Exemplars cover

This book explores questions of reading and writing practices in the French Renaissance. While the imitation of great masters of the past, such as Petrarch, was a staple of Renaissance poetics, French poets of the mid-1500s, including Saint-Gelais, Du Bellay, Ronsard, Baïf, and Magny, often turned to a set of unlikely exemplars: the second-rate poets published in a series of volumes known as the Italian Anthologies. Part one provides a general context for this surprising practice by examining modern and Renaissance theories of minor model imitation, Italian canon formation, the publishing of phenomenon of the anthologies and other florilegia, the use of personal commonplace books, and RonsardOs own annotated copies of these anthologies. Part two shows how these French poets applied the principle of fragmentary exemplarity in their imitations and how they used these sources to engage in a dialogue with each other that featured displays of rivalry and playfulness.

Readers will learn a great deal from Unlikely Exemplars about Renaissance theories of poetic composition, publishing, and the manipulation of Italian sources by French writers of the sixteenth century. * H-France Review *

ISBN: 9781611491159

Dimensions: 247mm x 168mm x 32mm

Weight: 773g

444 pages