Reflecting on Dante’s Trail

Actions Panel

Reflecting on Dante’s Trail

Book Launch: Zygmunt G. Barański, Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio: Literature, Doctrine, Reality (Legenda, 2020)

By Oxford Italian Sub-Faculty Research Seminar

Date and time

Mon, 24 May 2021 09:15 - 10:30 PDT

Location

Online

About this event

A conversation between Zygmunt G. Barański (Cambridge & Notre Dame) and Simon Gilson (Oxford) to celebrate the publication of Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio: Literature, Doctrine, Reality, Selected Essays, 6 (Legenda, 2020).

Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio, the three crowns of Italian literature, dealt with literature, doctrine, and reality in distinct, yet also overlapping, ways. In this major collection of nineteen essays, Barański explores how they endeavoured to create and establish their authority and identity as writers, while developing new ideas about literature and its status in the world, and, especially in Dante’s case, forging and legitimating new forms of writing. Each treated other authors, such as Guido Cavalcanti, or intellectuals, such as Epicurus, polemically and selectively as foils to their own self-portraits. Petrarch and Boccaccio had also to contend with Dante, and his extraordinary success as a ‘modern’ vernacular authority, though they employed very different strategies for doing so. Barański's close attention to the medieval context uniting these greatest of medieval writers is complemented by an equally close attention to the scholarly tradition on the questions addressed. To be a historian of literature also means being a historian of one’s subject.

Zygmunt G. Barański is Serena Professor of Italian Emeritus at the University of Cambridge and Notre Dame Professor of Dante & Italian Studies at the University of Notre Dame. He has published extensively on Dante, on medieval Italian literature, on Dante’s fourteenth- and twentieth-century reception, and on twentieth-century Italian literature, film, and culture. For many years he was senior editor of The Italianist, and currently holds the same position with Le tre corone.

Simon Gilson is Agnelli-Serena Professor of Italian Studies at the University of Oxford and a fellow of Magdalen College. Gilson’s research is focused on Dante, the reception of Dante, and Renaissance Italian literary, cultural and intellectual history. He has been involved in several collaborative funded research projects in the fields of medieval and Renaissance studies, and is currently leading an AHRC-funded collaborative project ‘Petrarch Commentary and Exegesis in Renaissance Italy, c. 1450-c.1650’. He is currently the General Editor of the monograph series ‘Italian Perspectives’ (Legenda, 2011-), a nominated honorary member of the Italian Dante Society in Florence (2008-), and is the Chair of the Society for Italian Studies (2017).

Organised by

Sales Ended