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"Tasso, Torquato, 1544-1595. Gerusalemme liberata"
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The Quest for Epic
2006,2014
Translated here for the first time into English, Sergio Zatti'sThe Quest for Epicis a selection of studies on the two major poets of the Italian Renaissance, Ludovico Ariosto and Torquato Tasso, by one of the most important literary critics writing in Italy today. An original and challenging work,The Quest for Epicdocuments the development of Italian narrative from the chivalric romance at the end of the fifteenth century to the genre of epic in the sixteenth century.
Zatti focuses on Ariosto'sOrlando Furioso, written in the early 1500s, and progresses to Tasso'sJerusalem Delivered, written at the end of the century, but also touches briefly on Boiardo, Ariosto's great predecessor at the Estense court in Ferrara, as well as on Pulci, Trissino, and many other Italian writers of the period. Zatti highlights the critical debates over narrative form in the sixteenth century that become signposts on the way to literary modernity and the eventual rise of the modern novel. Albert Russell Ascoli's introduction provides context by mapping Zatti's criticism and situating it among Italian and Anglo-American literary critical studies, making a case for the contribution this book will have for English-language readers.
Tasso's art and afterlives
2017
This interdisciplinary study examines the literary, artistic and
biographical afterlives in England of the great sixteenth-century
Italian poet Torquato Tasso, from before his death to the end of
the nineteenth century. Focusing on the lasting impact of his once
famous poem Gerusalemme liberata across a spectrum of
arts, it aims to stimulate a revival of interest in a neglected
poetic masterpiece and its author, some fifty years after the last
account of the poet in English. The influence of Tasso's poem is
traced and analysed in the literary works of Spenser, Milton,
Shakespeare and Daniel, and consideration is also given to its
impact on the visual and musical arts in England, in works by Van
Dyck, Poussin and Handel. A second strand focuses on English
responses to Tasso's troubled life in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries, exemplified in Byron's memorable impersonation of the
poet's voice in The Lament of Tasso .
Rembrandt's and Freud's \Gerusalemme Liberata\
1991
An critical analysis of Rembrandt Van Rijn's painting \"Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem\" is presented. Rembrandt's and Sigmund Freud's notions of home and tradition are compared.
Journal Article