
- 216 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Despite its immediate popularity and its acclaim as a modern equal of the ancient epics, Ariosto's Orlando Furioso (published in its final version in 1532) was for learned readers a perplexing work: it mixed romance, epic, and lyric poetry, poked fun at its marvelous and outmoded chivalric matter, contained many interrupted narrative threads, and included base and lowborn characters. In exploring the literary debates involved in elevating the Furioso to the rank of a classic, Daniel Javitch maintains that this was the first work of modern poetry to provoke widespread critical controversy, and that the contestation played an inaugural role in the formation of the European poetic canon. The Furioso was seen by its early publishers to embody the formal, thematic, and functional characteristics of the highly esteemed epics of antiquity. Some critics, however, found in this poem new forms and functions that seemed better suited to modern times; still others denied the work any form of legitimacy. Showing how the Furioso became a locus upon which various and conflicting ideologies could be projected, Javitch argues that such a development offers the best indication of a poem's having achieved canonicity.
Originally published in 1991.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. The Success of Orlando Furioso in the Sixteenth Century
- 2. The Legitimation of Orlando Furioso
- 3. Commentaries on Imitations in Orlando Furioso
- 4. Affiliations with Ovid's Metamorphoses
- 5. Critical Responses to Narrative Discontinuity in Orlando Furioso
- 6. Lionardo Salviati's Defense of Orlando Furioso
- 7. Other Defenses of Orlando Furioso in the 1580s
- 8. Harington's English Refractions of Orlando Furioso
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Primary Works Consulted
- Index