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This section includes: Notes
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Notes:
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During the Renaissance, notions of Europe's and of humankind's
centrality in the world were challenged and partially discredited by
advances in scientific theory, a rediscovery of Greco-Roman culture,
and the so-called discovery of the Americas.
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The Renaissance reached its peak at different times in different
cultures, beginning in Italy with the visual arts and, nearly two
centuries later, working its way as far as England, where its
achievements are most recognized in drama.
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An interest in the nature of this life rather than in the life to come
is of central importance in the works of Petrarch and Erasmus.
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The Renaissance tendency toward perfection is well illustrated by
Machiavelli's ideal prince and Castiglione's ideal courtier, but is
also illustrated in the reworking of older literary traditions such as
in Ariosto's Orlando Furioso.
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French rulers and aristocrats adopted the artistic, literary, and
social values of the more sophisticated Italian city-states such as
Castiglione's Urbino.
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Spain's major contributions to Renaissance literature can be traced to
Cervantes and Lope de Vega.
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Works from the English tradition, including Paradise Lost,
Hamlet, and Othello, question the values of the Renaissance.
Text:
* blue words within the text indicate important notes to remember
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During the Renaissance, notions of Europe's and of humankind's
centrality in the world were challenged and partially discredited by
advances in scientific theory, a rediscovery of Greco-Roman culture,
and the so-called discovery of the Americas. Such revolutionary
changes, however, did not come without certain resistance. Scientific
findings by Nicolaus Copernicus and Galileo Galilei met with opposition
from the Catholic Church, which plotted to maintain its political and
military control over an increasingly secular society. The
explorations of navigators such as Christopher Columbus prompted
radical revisions of European conceptions of world geography. In
Italy, humanists developed new standards of scholarship that allowed
for greater access to the cultural legacy of Greece and Rome and a
greater sense of their own position in history. Whereas medieval
Europe was preoccupied with the afterlife, Europe in the Renaissance
was primarily concerned with lifethe immediate, the tangible, the
earthly, and the aesthetic.
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Literally meaning "rebirth," the Renaissance is much more than a
singular impulse toward the intellectual, artistic, and political
achievements of ancient Greece and Rome. The term perhaps more
accurately refers to a generalized notion of artistic creativity, an
extraordinary zest for life and knowledge, a sensory delight in
opulence and magnificence, and an appreciation for individual
achievement. Not only does the usefulness of the term
Renaissance require a certain degree of elasticity with regard
to its impulses, it also requires elasticity when it is used to
describe a "movement." The Renaissance reached its peak at
different times in different cultures, beginning in Italy with the
visual arts and, nearly two centuries later, working its way as far as
England, where its achievements are most recognized in drama.
- An
interest in the nature of this life rather than in the life
to come is of central importance in the works of Petrarch
and Erasmus. Though crafted differently, each of
their works offers meditations on the role of the self and
the nature of reality. Petrarch, a contemporary of Dante
and Boccaccio, is often viewed as a precursor of the Renaissance.
Dedicated to recovering the classics of antiquity, he distanced
himself as much as possible from his contemporary period
that he derogatorily referred to as the "Dark Ages."
Following the discovery of Cicero's letters, Petrarch
turned to the dialogue as a literary form and a way to think
about the past. These letters were often imagined conversations
with friends and the ancients and offered Petrarch a way
to meditate on the connection with legacies of the past.
His Rime Sparse, considered to be his greatest
legacy to the European Renaissance, is a collection of 366
poems that reflect on questions about the self. What is
widely considered the most important work written by Dutch
born Desiderius Erasmus is his The Praise of Folly,
a work that suggests all joys in life are illusions that
make life bearable. An example of the Renaissance art of
"serious play," The Praise of Folly is
a humorous exploration of philosophical and moral questions.
Perhaps because it criticized the power of institutional
and religious authorities, the Praise of Folly
was included in the index of books banned by the Church.
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Renaissance tendency toward perfection is well illustrated
by Machiavelli's ideal prince and Castiglione's
ideal courtier, but is also illustrated in the reworking
of older literary traditions such as in Ariosto's Orlando
Furioso. Best known for The Prince,
a "handbook" on how to obtain and keep political
power, NiccolÚ Machiavelli was a preeminent student of politics
and an astute observer of historical events. Machiavelli
bases his reasoning for the course that a prudent prince
should follow on the basic premise that humanity is evilnot
so much a philosophical judgment, but a practical political
stratagem. The final chapter is more imaginative than scientific,
belonging more to the tradition of poetic visions such as
canto 6 of Dante's Purgatorio. Ludovico Ariosto's
Orlando Furioso also continues a literary tradition:
the imitation, parody, and honor of past works. Partly inspired
to overcome his predecessor, Ariosto takes the hero of the
popular romance epic Orlando Innamorato and forces
him to cross the line from love to lunatic frenzy. Author
of the immensely popular the Book of the Courtier,
Castiglione served in the courts of Francesco Gonzaga and
Guidobaldo da Montefeltro. The work is written in the form
of a dialogue and conveys ideals for court behavior.
- Toward the end of
the fifteenth century, the French "discovered"
Italy through travel and military invasion. French
rulers and aristocrats adopted the artistic, literary, and
social values of the more sophisticated Italian city-states
such as Castiglione's Urbino. Marguerite de
Navarre, one of the most influential members of the French
court, helped transform French culture as a writer, a patron
of the arts, and an intellectual. Her challenges to the
Catholic Church's stranglehold on religion contributed
to the Reformation movements. The Heptameron, a
collection of seventy stories framed by a larger narrative,
is generally attributed to her royal authorship, though
the circumstances of its production remain unknown. FranÁois
Rabelais dedicated the third book of Gargantua and Pantagruel
to Marguerite de Navarre. Trained as a Franciscan monk and
priest as well as doctor of medicine, Rabelais is know for
his bawdy and humorous parody of the grandest of Western
literary genres: the imperial epic. Different in tone, Michel
de Montaigne composed his stylistically rich and thematically
varied Essays around the central question "Who
am I?" His arguments focus on the elusive and unstable
character of the "self." With ease, he turns from
classical antiquity to the emerging modern world, so that
his position in history is apparent. During a period in
which Catholic and Protestant factions divided France, Montaigne
favored religious tolerance, skepticism about human self-interests,
and hatred for dogmatic positions. He is generally credited
with suspending the self-interest and bias he considered
ingrained in human nature in order to analyze himself, his
culture, and the place of humankind in the cosmos.
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Spain's major contributions to Renaissance literature can be traced
to Cervantes and Lope de Vega. Examining the conflict between
illusion and reality, Miguel de Cervantes's satire of chivalric
romances, Don Quixote, is widely considered to be the precursor
to the modern European novel. Don Quixote's interactions with Sancho
Panza shed light on an important aspect of Renaissance literature: the
frustrated desires of the human mind to produce a vision of the world
that is meaningful and satisfying. Considered one of the most
important dramatists of Spain's Golden Age, Lope de Vega viewed plays
as a less-than-serious art: he wrote plays simply to entertain people.
Nevertheless, his comedy Fuente Ovejuna draws on actual
historical events and matters of political importance at the time of
Ferdinand de Aragon's marriage to Isabella of Castile, culminating in
the union of Spain. Dealing with how a village community rises up
against an abusive comendador, the play is a strong affirmation about
how long-suffering people can reaffirm a sense of community and social
order.
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Works from the English tradition, including Paradise Lost,
Hamlet, and Othello, question the values of the
Renaissance. William Shakespeare's plays are considered to be among
the most important works of dramatic art in the modern Western world.
Originally performed at the Globe Theatre, Shakespeare's plays were
frequented by persons of all classes. Following the commercial success
of his plays, Shakespeare purchased a title for his father, allowing
himself to officially become known as a "gentleman born." Like other
Renaissance works, Hamlet and Othello present worlds in
which the culture of the courts and kings has been destroyed. In both
plays, Shakespeare presents a protagonist who, like other Renaissance
heroes, must ask whether personal and individual codes of conduct can
stand up against degraded communal practices. Bridging the Renaissance
interest in classical antiquity and the Reformation interest in the
Bible, John Milton's Paradise Lost is an important work of
Christian humanism in England. By attempting to disrupt the so-called
wisdom of the classics and the Bible, Milton's work asks important
questions about the role of literature in the pursuit of knowledge and
ways of knowing.
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