Tag: Petrarch

Petrarch and Sixteenth-Century Italian Portraiture


Free Download Ilaria Bernocchi, "Petrarch and Sixteenth-Century Italian Portraiture "
English | ISBN: 9463727248 | 2023 | 278 pages | PDF | 3 MB
The volume presents a wide-ranging investigation of the ways in which Petrarch’s legacy informed the relationship between visual and literary portraits in sixteenth-century Italy. Petrarch’s vast literary production influenced the intellectual framework in which new models of representation and self-representation developed during the Renaissance. His two sonnets on Laura’s portrait by Simone Martini and his ambivalent fascination with the illusionary power of portraiture in his Latin texts ― such as the Secretum, the Familiares and De remediis utriusque fortune ― constituted the theoretical reference for artists and writers alike. In a century dominated by the rhetorical comparison between art and literature (ut pictura poësis) and by the paragone debate, the interplay between Petrarch’s oeuvre, Petrarchism and portraiture shaped the discourse on the relationship between the sitters’ physical image and their inner life. The volume brings together diverse interdisciplinary contributions that explore the subject through a rich body of literary and visual sources.

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Petrarch


Free Download Thomas G. Bergin, "Petrarch"
English | 2005 | pages: 213 | ISBN: 1199217190 | EPUB | 1,8 mb
Franceso Petrarch (1304-1374), creator of the sonnet form, remained for more than three hundred years the most influential poet in Europe, his works more widely read than even those of Dante. This collection contains English language versions of his poems from across six centuries, in a wide variety of translations and reinterpretations. Spanning the Trionfi series and the Canzoniere – Petrarch’s empassioned sonnet-sequence concerning his beloved Laura – it also includes great English poems influenced by Petrarch. From Chaucer’s early adaptation of a Petrarchan sonnet in Troilus and Criseyde to the sixteenth century translations by the Earl of Surrey, Byron’s mocking consideration of the Canzoniere in Don Juan and Ezra Pound’s parody Silet, all provide a unique insight into the significance of the founder of the European lyric tradition.

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