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History Italy

Textual Masculinity and the Exchange of Women in Renaissance Venice

by (author) Courtney Quaintance

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
May 2015
Category
Italy, Renaissance, Italian, General, Gender Studies
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442619531
    Publish Date
    May 2015
    List Price
    $74.00
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781442649132
    Publish Date
    Apr 2015
    List Price
    $86.00

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Description

Textual Masculinity and the Exchange of Women in Renaissance Venice is a provocative analysis of the pornographic poetry written in patrician poet Domenico Venier’s social circle. While Venier and his salon were renowned for elegant love sonnets featuring unattainable female beloveds, among themselves they wrote and circulated poems in Venetian dialect in which women were prostitutes whose defiled bodies were available to all.

Courtney Quaintance analyses poetry, letters, plays, and verse dialogues to show how male writers established, sustained, and publicized their relationships to one another through the exchange of fictional women. She also shows how Gaspara Stampa and Veronica Franco, two women writers with ties to the salon, appropriated and transformed tropes of female sexuality and male literary collaboration to position themselves within this homosocial literary economy. Based on archival work and Quaintance’s exceptional knowledge of Venetian dialect poetry, Textual Masculinity and the Exchange of Women in Renaissance Venice is an unprecedented window into the understudied world of Venetian literature.

About the author

Courtney Quaintance is an associate professor in the Department of French and Italian at Dartmouth College.

Courtney Quaintance's profile page

Editorial Reviews

‘Quintances’ translations are lively and effective… We have much to learn from the material she analyzes.’

Renaissance Quarterly vol 69:04:2016

Textual Masculinities is full of new information, even about well-known subjects like Stampa and Franco… It includes a wealth of Venetian poetry that she has translated and published for the first time.’

Early Modern Women Journal vol 12:01:2017

Textual Masculinity elegantly weaves together social class and language, and cultures of manuscript exchange and print, academies and libertinism, in the late Venetian Renaissance.’

Renaissance and Reformation, vol 39:02:2016

‘Textual Masculinity is an important work providing innovative, more sophisticated, and broader understanding of the production of literature on women in sixteenth-century Venice. It will have to be taken into account in any future study the Renaissance Venetian literary world.’

Journal of Modern History vol 89:02:2017

‘This book is a major contribution to the field of early modern gender studies and a groundbreaking text that brilliantly approaches the understudies issues related to masculine identity.’

Gender/Sexuality/Italy vol 4:2017