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Ludovico Ariosto (1474–1533)

Autor(a) de Orlando Furioso

131+ Works 2,673 Membros 40 Críticas 10 Favorited

About the Author

Born in Reggio, Italy, in 1474, Ludovico Ariosto lived most of his life in Ferrara, in northern Italy. He enjoyed the patronage first of Cardinal Ippolito and then of the cardinal's brother, Alfonso, Duke of Este, who had been his inseparable companion in youth. Aristo composed a mock epic of mostrar mais chivalry titled Orlando Furioso. It appeared in 1516 and 1521 before the definitive edition of 1532. Hegel observed that Ariosto prepared the way for the treatment of chivalry in Cervantes's Don Quixote and Shakespeare's Falstaff in a gently veiled humor. A translation of Orlando Furioso into English heroic verse by Sir John Harrington was published in 1591, but by then Edmund Spenser had already sought to outdo Ariosto's epic in his own Faerie Queene. Walter Scott read a translation by John Hoole in 1783, and Byron drew on it for his Don Juan. In addition to the mock epic, Ariosto wrote many lyric poems in Latin and Italian, seven satires in terza rima, and five comedies in unrhymed lines of 11 syllables. His satires were read and imitated by Thomas Wyatt. One of his comedies, I suppositi, was translated and adapted into English by George Gascoigne and performed at Gray's Inn in 1566. It provided Shakespeare with much of the content and inspiration for The Taming of the Shrew. Ariosto died on July 6,1533. (Bowker Author Biography) Ludovico Ariosto was born on September 8, 1474 in Italy. Although his father had planned for him to have a legal career and he reluctantly studied law, he eventually turned to the study of literature. This was abruptly halted by the death of his father in 1500 and Ludovico, as the eldest, had to support his nine younger siblings. To this end, he spent the majority of his life in the service of the Este family of Ferrara. Ariosto wrote many popular plays, poems, and satires. The poem Orlando Furioso is his masterpiece and is considered one of the greatest embodiments of the literary and spiritual ideas of the Italian Renaissance. A long narrative written in octave stanzas, it consists of several episodes deftly modeled on epics, romances, and heroic poems. His seven Satires reveal his sorrow at his inability to complete his literary studies. Other works include Cassaria, La Lena, and I Suppositi, particularly notable because they were written in the vernacular. Ariosto spent his last years of life in Ferrara married to Alessandra Benucci, during which time he revised Orlando Furioso. He died on July 6, 1533. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Image credit: Ludovico Ariosto. From Bibliothek des allgemeinen und praktischen Wissens. Bd. 5" (1905). Wikimedia Commons.

Séries

Obras por Ludovico Ariosto

Orlando Furioso (1516) — Autor — 1,373 exemplares
Orlando Furioso, Part One (1516) 368 exemplares
Orlando Furioso, Part Two (1532) 293 exemplares
Orlando Furioso (1973) — Autor — 95 exemplares
Satire (1534) — Autor — 34 exemplares
Cinque canti (1964) 20 exemplares
Opere minori (1964) — Autor — 13 exemplares
Ludovico Ariosto (2015) 11 exemplares
The comedies of Ariosto (1975) 9 exemplares
Supposes (1999) 6 exemplares
Rime (2014) 5 exemplares
Supposes and jocasta (2008) 4 exemplares
Opere 4 exemplares
Tutte le opere. 4: Commedie (2008) — Autor — 3 exemplares
Roland furieux, T. 2 (2000) 3 exemplares
Poesie latine — Autor — 3 exemplares
Lirica — Autor — 3 exemplares
Opere (1989) 3 exemplares
I quattro poeti Italiani — Autor — 2 exemplares
Novelle del "Furioso" 2 exemplares
Lettere dalla Garfagnana (2008) 2 exemplares
Opere varie 1 exemplar
Orlando Furioso. 4 vv (1978) 1 exemplar
Orlando furioso 1 exemplar
L'Orlando furioso 1 exemplar
Ariosto, Opere 1 exemplar
Tales from Ariosto (2021) 1 exemplar
Orlando e Angelica 1 exemplar
Lena 1 exemplar
Ludovico Ariosto. (1993) 1 exemplar
Commedie satire 1 exemplar
Roland furieux - tome 2 (02) (2021) 1 exemplar
Commedie e satire 1 exemplar
Satire e lettere 1 exemplar
Versi d'amore (2020) 1 exemplar
Tres sátiras 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Golden Cities, Far (1970) — Contribuidor — 80 exemplares
Doré's Illustrations for Ariosto's "Orlando Furioso" (1980) — Contribuidor — 68 exemplares
Alcina [sound recording] (2000) — Author of original text — 22 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

A ripping yarn!

Ariosto's purpose, according to the introduction, was to entertain -- and he admirably succeeded.

This verse epic has everything: knights, evil sorcerers, good sorcerers, Christians, Pagans, love, lust, rape, sodomy, and even some virtue here and there.

Cross-dressing knights? Check. Visit to the Underworld? Check, followed by a trip to the moon (to recover lost wits, naturally). Gender-bending female knight who's constantly saving her boyfriend? Check and check (and mate).

There's a manipulative damsel-in-distress who blueballs each knight in turn, with each new suitor doing the dirty work of ridding her of the previous. The titular Orlando spends half the work rampaging through Europe like the Hulk, naked and unstoppable. There are so many characters in this thing that even the swords have names -- as do the horses, and possibly even a saddle or two.

Barbara Reynold's translation is a lot of fun, and a remarkably fast read given its length.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
mkfs | 6 outras críticas | Aug 13, 2022 |
This Slavitt translation is NOT a COMPLETE Orlando: it omits ten complete books, not counting individual lines from some cantos. Very disappointing, as Amazon etc. omit this detail; the index is rubbish. The translation tries awful hard to be 'modern.'
1 vote
Assinalado
JeffersonBallard | 18 outras críticas | May 7, 2022 |
I read the 1831 verse translation by William Stewart Rose. However there are a small number of pieces missing in that translation which i filled in using the 1591 translation by John Harrington.

Epic italian poem, featuring knights, damsels, magic and the occasional monster. Its not so much a single story as an entire library of them all mixed together. Set against the backdrop of the Moors invading France. This gives the work a lot more cohesion than other epics like the Faerie Queene.
The author does a pretty good job of reminding you who's who and whats been happening, whenever he switches characters. This helps a lot and i wasn't often confused about which character was which.
The best thing about this is the moral greyness of it all. It really is almost 'Game of Thrones' in places. Heroes lie, make bad deals to save their own skin, kill hundreds of soldiers or farmers, and in one intance tried to rape some woman who they just rescued.
I do have to say it has a LOT less attempted sexual assaults than the Faerie Queene, but a lot more consensual sex. It also has less monsters and magical creatures than than Spenser's work but i like that, it means that when things do get strange it has more of an impact.
A few of minor issues, one is the lists of famous people rammed in to the work here and there, these are only of interest to people of the day or historical scholars, but are easily skippable.
The other thing that can annoy is the structure, most of the switches between character are fine but occasionally it happens at an exciting moment and instead of hearing what happens next your forced to get through a completely unrelated plot before getting back to the action.
Also this is a direct sequel to the unfinished 'Orlando Innamorata' and while the version i read contained a quick summary of events from that work i still felt confused at the start and on occasions when it refers back to previous events from Innamorata.
Overall despite not being able to read it in its native language, its REALLY good. There's just so much in here and some of it is just the right amount of morally gray for a modern audience to appreciate. Oh and there's some kick ass females in here aswell.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
wreade1872 | 18 outras críticas | Nov 28, 2021 |
Edició bilingüe
 
Assinalado
Mestressadecasa | Oct 2, 2021 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
131
Also by
6
Membros
2,673
Popularidade
#9,606
Avaliação
4.1
Críticas
40
ISBN
200
Línguas
12
Marcado como favorito
10

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