Victoria Kirkham is professor of Romance languages at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of three books, most recently of Fabulous Vernacular: Boccaccio’s Filocolo and the Art of Medieval Fiction.
Armando Maggi is professor of Romance languages and a member of the Committee on History of Culture at the University of Chicago. He is the author of several books, including Satan’s Rhetoric and In the Company of Demons, both published by the University of Chicago Press.
List of Illustrations | p. ix |
Acknowledgments | p. xi |
Note on Bibliographical Forms and Abbreviations | p. xiii |
Chronology of Petrarch's Life and Works | p. xv |
A Life's Work | p. 1 |
An Enduring Vernacular Legacy | |
The Self in the Labyrinth of Time (Rerum vulgarium fragmenta) | p. 33 |
The Poem of Memory (Triumphi) | p. 63 |
Petrarch's Damned Poetry and the Poetics of Exclusion (Rime disperse) | p. 85 |
Literary Debut, Latin Humanism, and Orations | |
The Rebirth of the Romans as Models of Character (De viris illustribus) | p. 103 |
Petrarch's Philological Epic (Africa) | p. 113 |
The Beginnings of Humanistic Oratory: Petrarch's Coronation Oration (Collatio laureationis) | p. 131 |
Petrarch the Courtier: Five Public Speeches (Arenga facta Venecijs, Arringa facta, Mediolani, Arenga facta in civitate Novarie, Collatio brevis coram Iobanne Francorum rege, Orazione per la seconda ambasceria veneziana) | p. 141 |
The Unforgettable Books of Things to Be Remembered (Rerum memorandarum libri) | p. 151 |
Contempleatives Serenity | |
Pastoral as Personal Mythology in History (Bucolicum carmen) | p. 165 |
"You Will Be My Solitude": Solitude as Prophecy (De vita solitaria) | p. 179 |
A Humanistic Approach to Religious Solitude (De otio religioso) | p. 197 |
Journeys into the Soul | |
The Burning Question: Crisis and Cosmology in the Secret (Secretum) | p. 211 |
Petrarch's Personal Psalms (Psalmi penitentiales) | p. 219 |
The Place of the Itinerarium (Itinerarium ad sepulchrum domini nostri Yhesu Christi) | p. 229 |
Life's Turbulence | |
On the Two Faces of Fortune (De remediis utriusque fortune) | p. 245 |
The Art of Invective (Invective contra medicum) | p. 255 |
The Economy of Invective and a Man in the Middle (De sui ipsius et multorum ignorantia) | p. 263 |
Petrarch the Epistler | |
A Poetic Journal (Epystole) | p. 277 |
The Book without a Name: Petrarch's Open Secret (Liber sine nomine) | p. 291 |
The Uncollected Poet (Lettere disperse) | p. 301 |
Petrarch's Epistolary Epic: Letters on Familiar Matters (Rerum familiarum libri) | p. 309 |
Letters of Old Age: Love between Men, Griselda, and Farewell to Letters (Rerum senilium libri) | p. 321 |
Epilogue | |
To Write As Another: The Testamentum (Testamentum) | p. 333 |
Notes | p. 347 |
Bibliography | p. 479 |
List of Contributors | p. 521 |
Index | p. 527 |
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