Thesis Chapters by Paolo Gattavari

My PhD thesis explores the influence of Lucian of Samosata, a satirist and rhetorician of Syrian ... more My PhD thesis explores the influence of Lucian of Samosata, a satirist and rhetorician of Syrian origin who lived in the second century A.D., on fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Italian authors and on Northern authors who contributed to Lucian’s revival during the sixteenth century. Lucian’s corpus consists of about eighty texts, mostly dialogues, all composed in Greek. Though they were read widely in Byzantium, they remained unknown during the Latin Middle Ages. In 1397, Manuel Chrysoloras, a distinguished Byzantine scholar and diplomat, began to teach Greek in Florence and used Lucian’s writings, among other ancient works, as textbooks for this purpose. This moment represents the starting point of my thesis, which has three parts. The first, after having outlined the reception of Lucian in Quattrocento Italy, discusses the encounter between Lucian and his main fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century humanist admirers. By reviving the Lucianic dialogue, Leon Battista Alberti distanced himself from the Ciceronian model that he, like others, regarded as dominant in his age, opening thereby a new creative path in Renaissance literature. Giovanni Pontano, while taking aim at, for the most part, the same satirical targets as Alberti, sought to find a point of convergence between Lucianic and Ciceronian dialogue. By contrast, in Ferrara, humanists and authors writing mainly in the vernacular adapted Lucian’s sharp irony to the sensibility of a refined Renaissance court. The second part of my thesis analyses how, at the beginning of the Cinquecento, two Northern humanists, Desiderius Erasmus and Thomas More, gave Lucianic satire a new direction, by infusing it with theological meanings. The third and final part focuses on a group of sixteenth-century Italian writers usually known as poligrafi, among them Niccolò Franco, Ortensio Lando and Anton Francesco Doni. The defining trait of their satirical compositions is that they filtered their understanding and reinvention of Lucian through the Lucianic works of Erasmus and More.
Conference Presentations by Paolo Gattavari
Serio ludere. Sagesse et dérision à l'âge de l’Humanisme, 2020
The Sermo primus by Antonio Urceo, usually known as Codro, represents a satire of society in whic... more The Sermo primus by Antonio Urceo, usually known as Codro, represents a satire of society in which the theme of metamorphosis is the undisputed protagonist. Codro’s stance finds an antecedent in the satirical works of Leon Battista Alberti. The sense of relentless changeability of reality, the critique of pedantic men of letters and the connection between laughter and truth are the main elements shared by Codro and Alberti.
Book Reviews by Paolo Gattavari
Annali d'italianistica, 2018
Uploads
Thesis Chapters by Paolo Gattavari
Conference Presentations by Paolo Gattavari
Book Reviews by Paolo Gattavari