Catullus and His Renaissance Readers
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Product Description
This is the first general study of the fortunes of Catullus in the Renaissance. After a brief introduction tracing the transmission of the poet from antiquity to the middle of the fifteenth century, the book follows his reception and interpretation by editors, commentators, university lecturers, and poets from the first edition (1472) through the sixteenth century. The focus is on Catullus but also on his Renaissance readers. Their text and interpretations not only influenced the ways in which later generations (including our own) would read the poet, but also provide windows into their own intellectual and historical worlds, which include Poliziano's Florence, Rome under the Medici Pope Leo X and his puritanical successor Adrian VI, the Paris of Ronsard and Marc-Antoine de Muret, post-Tridentine Rome, and sixteenth-century Leiden - as well as fifteenth-century Verona, where Catullus was an object of patriotic veneration, and Pontano's Naples, where poets learned to read and imitate him through Martial's imitations.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2040126 in Books
- Published on: 1993-02-18
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 464 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Scholars of both the Renaissance and the ancient world will find this study rewarding and will benefit from the author's wide learning."--Choice
"If one measure of a good book is a concluding wish that it were even longer, then Julia Gaisser's study is a very fine book indeed. Its various virtues include a clear and graceful style, an absolutely lucid organization, thorough coverage of primary and secondary sources, and a topic both focused and full of broader implications. Reading Gaisser provides a solid introduction not only to the subject announced in her title but to a whole intellectual milieu; in her pages the world of Renaissance humanism comes to life....A study that might easily have been dry and pedantic instead moves briskly to a close that will seem (to many readers) to come too soon."--Sixteenth Century Journal
"This is an extremely well researched and well written book with much to offer readers interested in the role played by Classical authors in the development of Renaissance literature."--Religious Studies Review
"Gaisser has done a valuable service by navigating the fortuna of Catullus in the Renaissance and judiciously bringing to light the earliest influences that shaped the text we now possess....Any future study will have to use her work as a starting point."--The Classical Review
"Gaisser has produced a first-rate piece of scholarship which will remain the definitive treatment of its subject for many years to come."--Renaissance Quarterly
