Italian Romanticism - The Language Of Romanticism
THE LANGUAGE OF ROMANTICISM
Sante Matteo
SOURCE: "The Centripetal Romantic: Symphonious Discourse in Polyphonous Italy," in The Reasonable Romantic: Essays on Alessandro Manzoni, edited by Sante Matteo and Larry H. Peer, Peter Lang, 1986, pp. 33-45
[In the following essay, Matteo describes the fragmented condition of the Italian language at the time that Manzoni wrote his novel I promessi sposi, calling the work "the first truly Italian discourse" and "the foundation on which modern Italian literature and language have been built.]
American students of Italian literature are often perplexed when they fail to find passages from Dante's Divine Comedy or from Alessandro Manzoni's I promessi sposi (The Betrothed) in Italian literary anthologies, compilations of selected passages from what have been judged to be the great works of Italian literature. Dante and Manzoni, they have learned, are important writers in...
[The entire page is 17082 words long]
