de Vulgari Eloquentia: Dante's Book of Exile
de Vulgari Eloquentia: Dante's Book of Exile
Shapiro's translation will be of special interest to medievalists and to serious readers of The Divine Comedy. In a later section, she considers the less precursors of Dante as a writer of the "Romance idiom" and their influence on him. Then she concentrates on the least studied aspects of the treatise in order to reveal its profound affiliations with late medieval grammatical investigations--it is possible to see in Dante "a grammarian beneath the poet." Her conclusion summarizes the apparent textual contradictions and the significance. Thus, this book provides a thorough historical, philosophical, and rhetorical context for De vulgari eloquentia and a new English translation that is enriched by that scholarship.
Author: Marianne Shapiro
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Published: 01/01/1990
Pages: 277
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.33lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.81d
ISBN: 9780803242111
About the Author
Marianne Shapiro, who has taught at Yale University and the University of California, Berkeley, is the author of Hieroglyph of Time: The Petrarchan Sestina (1980) and The Poetics of Ariosto (1988).
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