This document provides an overview of Italian literature and some of its most prominent authors. It discusses the origins of Italian literature in the 13th century and how certain poets helped establish the modern Italian language. Ten influential Italian authors are then highlighted, including Dante Alighieri for the Divine Comedy, Giovanni Boccaccio for The Decameron, and Francesco Petrarch for his sonnets. Details are given on some of their most famous works that contributed greatly to European literature during the Renaissance.
This document provides an overview of Italian literature and some of its most prominent authors. It discusses the origins of Italian literature in the 13th century and how certain poets helped establish the modern Italian language. Ten influential Italian authors are then highlighted, including Dante Alighieri for the Divine Comedy, Giovanni Boccaccio for The Decameron, and Francesco Petrarch for his sonnets. Details are given on some of their most famous works that contributed greatly to European literature during the Renaissance.
This document provides an overview of Italian literature and some of its most prominent authors. It discusses the origins of Italian literature in the 13th century and how certain poets helped establish the modern Italian language. Ten influential Italian authors are then highlighted, including Dante Alighieri for the Divine Comedy, Giovanni Boccaccio for The Decameron, and Francesco Petrarch for his sonnets. Details are given on some of their most famous works that contributed greatly to European literature during the Renaissance.
This document provides an overview of Italian literature and some of its most prominent authors. It discusses the origins of Italian literature in the 13th century and how certain poets helped establish the modern Italian language. Ten influential Italian authors are then highlighted, including Dante Alighieri for the Divine Comedy, Giovanni Boccaccio for The Decameron, and Francesco Petrarch for his sonnets. Details are given on some of their most famous works that contributed greatly to European literature during the Renaissance.
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Ciao a tutti! Good afternoon!
Fun Facts about Italy
1. Italy is home to the largest number of UNESCO World heritage Sites- More than 40! 2. Italy is the 4 th most visited country in the world with almost 40 million visitors a year. 3. The average Italian consumes 26 gallons of wine a year. Italy has been making wines for over 2800 years. 4. Italy has over 3000 museums. Sixty percent of the worlds art treasures are in Italy. 5. Every day, 3000 gets tossed into the famous Trevi Fountain. 6. Italy has more famous fashion designers than any other country. 7. Italian pizza originated in Naples during the 18 th century. 8. The oldest film festival in the world, beginning at 1930 is the Venice Film Festival. 9. The national sport of Italy is soccer (known as football outside of America). Italy also won the world cup for 4 times. 10. The automobile is one of Italys greatest products. In addition to the Fiat brand, Fiat owns Lamborghini, Ferrari, Masserati, Alfa Romeo and Chrysler brands. Italy, officially the Italian republic or Repubblica Italiana is a unitary parliamentary republic in Southern Europe. Its famous by its boot-shaped peninsula. Its bordered by France, Switzerland, Austria and Slovenia along the Alps on the North. To the south, it consists entirely of the Italian Peninsula, Sicily and Sardinia- two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea- and many other smaller islands. The Italian Peninsula is surrounded by five seas: the Adriatic, Ionian, Tyrrhenean, Ligurian, and Mediterranean. The capital of Italy is Rome and is also the largest city in Italy; Milan is the second- largest city. The Renaissance or rebirth began in Italy during the 1300 and lasted till about the 1600. It ushered in cultural and intellectual transformation. Italian Literature The first Italian vernacular literature began to take shape in the 13th century with the imitation of Provenal lyric poetry at the court of Frederick II in Sicily. The Sicilians are credited with inventing the sonnet, which became the most widely used form of Italian poetry and later flourished throughout Europe. The Sicilian style was dominant in the north until c.1260, when Guido Guinizelli, a Bolognese poet and jurist, moved from the Provenal conception of courtly love to a more mystical and philosophical spirituality. The basis of the modern Italian Language was established by the Florentine poet Dante Alighieri whos greatest work, the Divine Comedy, is considered amongst the foremost literary statements produced in Europe during the Middle Ages. The lyrics of Petrarch especially his sonnets and the short tales and long narratives in verse of Boccaccio set the style for all of Europe during the Renaissance. Both Petrarch and Boccaccio were proponents of ancient classics, of humanism and individualism in general. Other notable works were in prose and in the epic including drama like works of Machiavelli. Prominent Italian Writers and their famous works 1. Dante Alighieri- Divine Comedy In Italy he is known as il Sommo Poeta ("the Supreme Poet") or just il Poeta. He, Petrarch and Boccaccio are also known as "the three fountains" or "the three crowns". Dante is also called the "Father of the Italian language". La Commedia is an epic poem written between 1308 and 1321. On the surface, the poem describes Dante's travels through Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven; but at a deeper level, it represents allegorically the soul's journey towards God. At this deeper level, Dante draws on medieval Christian theology and philosophy, especially Thomistic philosophy and the Summa Theologica of Thomas Aquinas.Consequently, the Divine Comedy has been called "the Summa in verse". The Divine Comedy is composed of 14,233 lines that are divided into three canticas Inferno- Hell, Purgatorio- Purgatory, and Paradiso- Paradise- each consisting of 33cantos. 2. Giovanni Boccaccio- The Decameron was an Italian author and poet, a friend, student, and correspondent of Petrarch, an important Renaissance humanist and the author of a number of notable works including the Decameron, On Famous Women, and his poetry in the Italian vernacular. With the subtitle of Prince Galehaut is a 14th-century medieval allegory. Told as a frame story encompassing 100 tales by ten young people. Boccaccio probably began composing the work in 1350, and finished it in 1351 or 1353. The various tales of love in The Decameron range from the erotic to the tragic. Tales of wit, practical jokes, and life lessons contribute to the mosaic. In addition to its literary import, it documents life in 14th-century Italy. 3. Francesco Petrarch- Sonnets Petrarch is best known for his Italian poetry, notably the Canzoniere ("Songbook") and the Trionfi ("Triumphs"). However, Petrarch was an enthusiastic Latin scholar and did most of his writing in this language. His Latin writings include scholarly works, introspective essays, letters, and more poetry. Among them are Secretum ("My Secret Book"), an intensely personal, guilt-ridden imaginary dialogue with Augustine of Hippo; De Viris Illustribus ("On Famous Men"), a series of moral biographies; Rerum Memorandarum Libri, an incomplete treatise on the cardinal virtues; De Otio Religiosorum ("On Religious Leisure") and De Vita Solitaria ("On the Solitary Life"), which praise the contemplative life; De Remediis Utriusque Fortunae ("Remedies for Fortune Fair and Foul"), a self-help book which remained popular for hundreds of years; Itinerarium ("Petrarch's Guide to the Holy Land"); a number of invectives against opponents such as doctors, scholastics, and the French; the Carmen Bucolicum, a collection of 12 pastoral poems; and the unfinished epic Africa. 4. Desiderius Erasmus- the Praise of Folly Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus (28 October 1466 12 July 1536), known as Erasmus of Rotterdam, was a Dutch Renaissance humanist, Catholic priest, social critic, teacher, and theologian. I n Praise of Folly (Greek title: Morias Enkomion ( ), Latin: Stultitiae Laus, sometimes translated as I n Praise of More, Dutch title: Lof der Zotheid) is an essay written in Latin in 1509 and first printed in 1511. The essay was inspired by De Triumpho Stultitiae, written by the Italian humanist Faustino Perisauli, born at Tredozio, near Forl. 5. Niccolo Machiavelli- The Prince was an Italian historian, politician, diplomat, philosopher, humanist and writer based in Florence during the Renaissance. He was for many years an official in the Florentine Republic, with responsibilities in diplomatic and military affairs. He was a founder of modern political science, and more specifically political ethics. He also wrote comedies, carnival songs, and poetry. The Prince (Italian: Il Principe) is a political treatise. The Prince is sometimes claimed to be one of the first works of modern philosophy, especially modern political philosophy, in which the effective truth is taken to be more important than any abstract ideal. It was also in direct conflict with the dominant Catholic and scholastic doctrines of the time concerning how to consider politics and ethics.
6. Giacomo Leopardi- To Itally generally considered, along with such figures as Dante, Ariosto and Tasso, to be among Italy's greatest poets and also one of its greatest thinkers in general. 7. Gabriele DAnnuncio- lyric poetry Truly the First (1879); New Songs (1884) D'Annunzio was associated with the Decadent movement in his literary works, which interplayed closely with French Symbolism and British Aestheticism. Such works represented a turn against the naturalism of the preceding romantics and was both sensuous and mystical. 8. Giosue Carducci- poetry (1906) (Nobel Prize) was an Italian poet and teacher. He was very influential and was regarded as the official national poet of modern Italy. In 1906 he became the first Italian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. 9. Luigi Pirandello- Six Characters in Sarch of an Author (play) short stories (1934 Nobel Prize) was an Italian dramatist, novelist, and short story writer awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1934, for his "bold and brilliant renovation of the drama and the stage". Pirandello's works include novels, hundreds of short stories, and about 40 plays, some of which are written in Sicilian.
is a 1921 Italian play by Luigi Pirandello, first performed in that same year. An absurdist metatheatrical play about the relationship between authors, their characters, and theatre practitioners, it premiered at the Teatro Valle in Rome to a mixed reception, with shouts from the audience of "Manicomio!" ("Madhouse!"), though the reception improved at subsequent performances helped when Pirandello provided for the play's third edition, published in 1925, a foreword clarifying its structure and ideas. 10. Grazia Deledda- novels (1926) (Nobel Prize) Deledda's whole work is based on strong facts of love, pain and death upon which rests the feeling of sin and of an inevitable fatality. In Deledda's novels there is always a strong connection between places and people, feelings and environment. The environment depicted is that one harsh of native Sardinia, but it is not depicted according to regional veristic schemes neither according to the otherworldly vision by D'Annunzio, but relived through the myth. Grazie per lascolto, thank you for listening!