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The essays in this volume revisit the Italian Renaissance to
rethink spaces thought to be defined and certain: from the social
spaces of convent, court, or home, to the literary spaces of
established genres such as religious plays or epic poetry.
Repopulating these spaces with the women who occupied them but have
often been elided in the historical record, the essays also remind
us to ask what might obscure our view of texts and archives, what
has remained marginal in the texts and contexts of early modern
Italy and why. The contributors, suggesting new ways of
interrogating gendered discourses of genre, identities, and
sanctity, offer a complex picture of gender in early modern Italian
literature and culture. Read in dialogue with one another, their
pieces provide a fascinating survey of currents in gender studies
and early modern Italian studies and point to exciting future
directions in these fields.
Textual Masculinity and the Exchange of Women in Renaissance Venice
is a provocative analysis of the pornographic poetry written in
patrician poet Domenico Venier's social circle. While Venier and
his salon were renowned for elegant love sonnets featuring
unattainable female beloveds, among themselves they wrote and
circulated poems in Venetian dialect in which women were
prostitutes whose defiled bodies were available to all. Courtney
Quaintance analyses poetry, letters, plays, and verse dialogues to
show how male writers established, sustained, and publicized their
relationships to one another through the exchange of fictional
women. She also shows how Gaspara Stampa and Veronica Franco, two
women writers with ties to the salon, appropriated and transformed
tropes of female sexuality and male literary collaboration to
position themselves within this homosocial literary economy. Based
on archival work and Quaintance's exceptional knowledge of Venetian
dialect poetry, Textual Masculinity and the Exchange of Women in
Renaissance Venice is an unprecedented window into the understudied
world of Venetian literature.
The essays in this volume revisit the Italian Renaissance to
rethink spaces thought to be defined and certain: from the social
spaces of convent, court, or home, to the literary spaces of
established genres such as religious plays or epic poetry.
Repopulating these spaces with the women who occupied them but have
often been elided in the historical record, the essays also remind
us to ask what might obscure our view of texts and archives, what
has remained marginal in the texts and contexts of early modern
Italy and why. The contributors, suggesting new ways of
interrogating gendered discourses of genre, identities, and
sanctity, offer a complex picture of gender in early modern Italian
literature and culture. Read in dialogue with one another, their
pieces provide a fascinating survey of currents in gender studies
and early modern Italian studies and point to exciting future
directions in these fields.
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