Renaissance literature
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Renaissance Literature refers to the period in European literature, which began in Italy during the 15th century and spread around Europe through the 17th century. The impact of the Renaissance varied across the continent; countries that were predominantly Catholic or Protestant experienced the Renaissance differently compared to areas where the Orthodox Church was dominant as reflecting on its culture, as well as those areas of Europe under Islamic rule.
The creation of the printing press encouraged authors to write in the local vernacular rather than in Greek or Latin classical languages, widening the reading audience and promoting the spread of Renaissance ideas.
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[edit] Authors of the Renaissance
Among the famous authors of the literary movement of the Renaissance are:
- Dante (Divine Comedy) (arguably a legacy of the Medieval era)
- Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (Oration on the Dignity of Man)
- Erasmus (In Praise of Folly)
- Sir Thomas More (Utopia)
- Boccaccio (On Famous Women, Decameron)
- Machiavelli (The Prince)
- Castiglione (The Book of the Courtier)
- Montaigne (Essais)
- Cervantes (Don Quixote)
- Luís de Camões (The Lusiads)
- Shakespeare
[edit] The theme of justice
Within Renaissance literature, there seems to be an underlying theme of justice; however, individual characters are not exemplary figures of justice themselves. Aristotle, a Greek philosopher, believed that instead of seeking personal revenge, true justice could only be obtained through a body of jurors who were willing and capable of distributing justice to individuals. Thus the characters in Renaissance literature typically defy Aristotelian views of virtue by having little respect for others.
[edit] Renaissance literature by country
The Decameron, the short story collection by the Italian author Boccaccio - with its frame tale of nobles fleeing the plague and telling each other stories - had an enormous impact on French writers.
[edit] Genres
The literary movement produced Latin and vernacular poetry, history, and prose fiction inspired by classical models. A humanistic curriculum dominated grammar schools and expanded its position into almost all of the universities of the time.
For the period, as with The Canterbury Tales and the Decameron, part of the attraction of the dialogued short story and the frame tale (with its fictional speakers discussing each other's stories) lies in their "performability" by someone reading out loud to a non-literate public and in their grab-bag and (frequently) digressive structure: these tales are capable of taking on all kinds of material, both sophisticated and vulgar.
New forms spread by the Renaissance included the sonnet.
[edit] Role of women in Renaissance literature
Women played minor but steadily growing role in Renaissance literature. They were still limited by society because of their gender but, nevertheless, some women did publish books.
[edit] The theory of the “Great Chain of Being” in Renaissance literature
The Great Chain of Being was a popularly held idea during the Renaissance period. The “chain” consists of four categories:
- angels are at the top
- humans second
- beasts and plants next
- and inanimate objects last.
According to this theory, more matter equals less spirit and vice versa. Therefore, as angels are created of the least amount of matter, they possess the most spirit. Beasts and inanimate objects possess little spirit because they have so much matter.
It was also believed that beings within their category were not meant to move up or down. If they began to acquire more and more reason, it was possible for them to move up, however, they were meant to remain at their natural level of being where one’s instincts prevail. For example, humans would not degrade themselves to beasts, nor would they exalt themselves to angels because they were created to be humans; and this would be going against all natural instincts.
[edit] A brief chronology of Renaissance literature
Many historians recognize the beginning of the Renaissance Period as 6 April 1341 when Francesco Petrarch was crowned Poet Laureate. This period included revelations in art, philosophy, and science, all which contributed to development of the literature. This was a time of rebirth because many of the principles exposed during the classical time period in ancient Greece and Rome were the basis of Renaissance literature.
In the mid-fifteenth century, Johann Gutenberg invented the printing press. As a result, multiples of texts were made, therefore making the literature more accessible to Europeans.[1]
[edit] Citations
- ^ Wilson, Katharina M. "Women of the Renaissance and Reformations." UGA Press: Athens, 1987.
[edit] See also
- Dutch Renaissance and Golden Age literature
- Swedish reformation and Renaissance literature
- Early Modern literature
[edit] External links
- 16th Century Renaissance Literature
- 17th Century Literature
- The French Literature
- Scottish Literature
- Hungarian literature
- Polish Literature
- Catalan Literature
- The Decameron
- Petrarch 1
- Petrarch 2
- Printing Press
- The Fall of Rome