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Petrarchism At Work: Contextual Economies In The Age Of Shakespeare [Hardcover]

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  • Category: Books (Literary Criticism)
  • Author:  William J. Kennedy
  • Author:  William J. Kennedy
  • ISBN-10:  1501700014
  • ISBN-10:  1501700014
  • ISBN-13:  9781501700019
  • ISBN-13:  9781501700019
  • Publisher:  Cornell University Press
  • Publisher:  Cornell University Press
  • Pages:  320
  • Pages:  320
  • Binding:  Hardcover
  • Binding:  Hardcover
  • Pub Date:  01-Jun-2016
  • Pub Date:  01-Jun-2016
  • SKU:  1501700014-11-MING
  • SKU:  1501700014-11-MING
  • Item ID: 100102396
  • Seller: ShopSpell
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The Italian scholar and poet Francesco Petrarch (13041374) is best remembered today for vibrant and impassioned love poetry that helped to establish Italian as a literary language. Petrarch inspired later Renaissance writers, who produced an extraordinary body of work regarded today as perhaps the high-water mark of poetic productivity in the European West. These Petrarchan poets were self-consciously aware of themselves as poetsas craftsmen, revisers, and professionals. As William J. Kennedy shows in Petrarchism at Work, this commitment to professionalism and the mastery of poetic craft is essential to understanding Petrarch's legacy.

Petrarchism at Work contributes to recent scholarship that explores relationships between poetics and economic history in early-modern European literature. Kennedy traces the development of a Renaissance aesthetics from one based upon Platonic intuition and visionary furor to one grounded in Aristotelian craftsmanship and technique. Their polarities harbor economic consequences, the first privileging the poets divinely endowed talent, rewarded by the autocratic largess of patrons, the other emphasizing the poets acquired skill and hard work. Petrarch was the first to exploit the tensions between these polarities, followed by his poetic successors. These include Gaspara Stampa in the emergent salon society of Venice, Michelangelo Buonarroti in the gift economy of Medici Florence and papal Rome, Pierre de Ronsard and the poets of his Pl?iade brigade in the fluctuant Valois court, and William Shakespeare and his contemporaries in the commercial world of Elizabethan and early Stuart London. As Kennedy shows, the poetic practices of revision and redaction by Petrarch and his successors exemplify the transition from a premodern economy of patronage to an early modern economy dominated by unstable market forces.

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