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Title The wounded body : memory, language and the self from Petrarch to Shakespeare / Fabrizio Bondi, Massimo Stella, Andrea Torre, editors
Published Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, 2022

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Description 1 online resource (1 volume) : illustrations (color)
Contents 1. Preface (Fabrizio Bondi, Massimo Stella, Andrea Torre) -- 2. The Wounded Poet. On the Twenty-First Series of Deleuzes Logic of Sense (Rocco Ronchi) -- 3. The Scars and the Tale, the Wounds and the Drama (Anna Beltrametti) -- 4. The aperto segno and the colpo ascoso. The Love Wound in Cavalcanti and Dante (Gabriele Frasca) -- 5. Through the Wound, and What Petrarch Found There (Andrea Torre) -- 6. Untimely wounds in Shakespeares Macbeth (Iolanda Plescia) -- 7. An Anatomy of the Destructiveness of Knights. Wound Imagery and the Culture of Physical Force in Langue doil Heroic Narrative (Alvaro Barbieri) -- 8. Adventure and the Wound: History of a Paradoxical Relationship (Manuel Muhlbacher) -- 9. The Wounded Body in Boiardos Innamorato and Ariostos Orlando Furioso (Sabrina Stroppa) -- 10. The Bleeding Scar. Towards a Reading of Gerusalemme liberata as the Poem of Belatedness (Giancarlo Alfano) -- 11. The Meta-Physical Wound: Shakespeares Roman Plays (Massimo Stella) -- 12. Chacun de nous tient sa blessure ouverte, si che tal piaga il mondo unqua risalde. The Wound in Womens Poetry (that of Cixous and Colonna among others) (Tatiana Crivelli) -- 13. A masochistic Prometheus: the Wound in Tassos Lyric Poetry (Fabrizio Bondi) -- 14. And of what force your wounding graces are. Importing and Augmenting the Wound from Italy to Elizabethan England (Selene Scarsi) -- 15. Amoretta and Lucrece: Wounded Identities (Luca Manini) -- 16.Risguarda quella piaga. Stigmata and the Education of the Gaze in Early Modern Franciscan Iconography (Giuseppe Capriotti) -- 17. What Are These Wounds? Stigmata and/as Memory in Italian Religious Literature (Andrea Torre)
Summary This edited collection explores the image of the wound as a cultural symptom and a literary-visual trope at the core of representations of a new concept of selfhood in Early Modern Italian and English cultures, as expressed in the two complementary poles of poetry and theatre. The semantic field of the wounded body concerns both the image of the wound as a traumatic event, which leaves a mark on someones body and soul (and prompts one to investigate its causes and potential solutions), and the motif of the scar, which draws attention to the fact that time has passed and urges those who look at it to engage in an introspective and analytical process. By studying and describing the transmission of this metaphoric paradigm through the literary tradition, the contributors show how the image of the bodily woundfrom Petrarchs representation of the Self to the overt crisis that affects the heroes and the poetic worlds created by Ariosto and Tasso, Spenser and Shakespearecould respond to the emergence of Modernity as a new cultural feature.. Fabrizio Bondi is Fellow of Italian Literature at Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa, Italy. Massimo Stella is Lecturer in Comparative Literatures and Theory of Literature at the Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy. Andrea Torre is Associate Professor of Italian Literature at Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa, Italy
Notes Includes index
Print version record
Subject English literature -- History and criticism.
Italian literature -- History and criticism.
Human body in literature.
Wounds and injuries in literature.
Memory in literature.
English literature
Human body in literature
Italian literature
Memory in literature
Wounds and injuries in literature
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
Author Bondi, Fabrizio, editor.
Stella, Massimo, editor.
Torre, Andrea, editor.
ISBN 9783030919047
3030919048