The Poetics of Imitation in the Italian Theatre of the Renaissance

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University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2013 - Drama - 222 pages

The theatre of the Italian Renaissance was directly inspired by the classical stage of Greece and Rome, and many have argued that the former imitated the latter without developing a new theatre tradition. In this book, Salvatore DiMaria investigates aspects of innovation that made Italian Renaissance stage a modern, original theatre in its own right. He provides important evidence for creative imitation at work by comparing sources and imitations incuding Machiavelli's Mandragola and Clizia, Cecchi's Assiuolo, Groto's Emilia, and Dolce's Marianna and highlighting source elements that these playwrights chose to adopt, modify, or omit entirely.

DiMaria delves into how playwrights not only brought inventive new dramaturgical methods to the genre, but also incorporated significant aspects of the morals and aesthetic preferences familiar to contemporary spectators into their works. By proposing the theatre of the Italian Renaissance as a poetic window into the living realities of sixteenth-century Italy, he provides a fresh approach to reading the works of this period.

 

Contents

Machiavellis Mandragola
26
Source versus Imitation
32
New Characters
38
From Stage to Stage
45
Cleostrata versus Sofronia
55
A Machiavellian Perspective
61
Fiction Meets Reality
84
Della Porta Adapts Bandellos Prose
105
Giraldis Imitation of His Own Prose Narrative
128
From History to the Stage
148
Conclusion
167
Notes
173
Bibliography
199
Index
213
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About the author (2013)

Salvatore DiMaria is a professor in the Department of Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Tennessee.

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