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Chapter 3 - Language: “Neminem ante nos

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Albert Russell Ascoli
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
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Summary

VERNACULAR AUTHORSHIP BETWEEN CONVIVIO AND DE VULGARI ELOQUENTIA

If Dante's definitional approach to autorità in Convivio has gone virtually unexamined in the scholarship, his choice of the vernacular over Latin has not. It is widely recognized, in no small measure because Dante insists on it, that his sense of himself as author-on-the-make is intimately bound up with the problematic status of the nascent Italian language as a vehicle for serious intellectual and moral discourse, its patently inferior status with respect to the normative language of high culture in the Middle Ages.

This issue is already on the table in Vita Nova. For instance, it is visible in the interpolation of Latin tags at various strategic points throughout the text. It is a central feature of chapter 25, where the vernacular “dicitori d'amore” are both distinguished from and compared to those classical poeti – four of five writing in Latin – whom Dante dares to present as their counterparts in the deployment of figurative language. On the other hand, no overt defense of the use of Italian as against Latin is made, except in the negative sense of limiting vernacular poetry to the subject of the love for a woman, and of defining women as a crucial segment of the work's intended audience.

In Convivio the situation has changed (cf. Grayson 1963: 46).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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