
A vivid portrait of Italy’s literary flowering emerges through close readings of its most celebrated works. The author guides listeners through Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso, tracing how the poet reshapes Dante’s medieval vision into a vibrant blend of romance, satire, and heroic comedy. By dissecting the poem’s structure, irony, and visual imagination, the narrative reveals the ways Renaissance writers celebrated beauty while probing moral and philosophical questions.
The journey continues with a lively survey of the novella tradition, from Boccaccio’s pioneering tales to the colorful narratives of Bandello, Straparola and their successors. Their social contexts, stylistic tricks, and daring themes are illuminated, showing how these short fictions shaped later European drama. Finally, the work examines early secular theater, its classical borrowings, and the unique challenges Italian playwrights faced in forging a national stage. Listeners gain a clear sense of how imagination, adaptation, and cultural exchange defined the era’s enduring literary legacy.
Full title
Renaissance in Italy, Volume 5 (of 7) Italian Literature, Part 2
Language
en
Duration
~21 hours (1254K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Ted Garvin, Linda Cantoni, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. Special thanks to Andrew D. Hwang.
Release date
2011-06-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1893
A vivid Victorian man of letters, he wrote passionately about the Italian Renaissance, travel, poetry, and the inner life. His work also became important for early modern writing about same-sex desire and personal identity.
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