Rebuilding post-revolutionary Italy : Leopardi and Vico's 'New science'

Bibliographic Information

Rebuilding post-revolutionary Italy : Leopardi and Vico's 'New science'

Martina Piperno

(Oxford University studies in the Enlightenment, 2018:04)

Voltaire Foundation, c2018

  • : [pbk.]

Other Title

Rebuilding post revolutionary Italy : Leopardi and Vico's "New science"

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Note

Bibliography: p. 237-259

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Co-Winner of the Modern Language Association's Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for Italian Studies, 2018. The rediscovery of the thought of Giambattista Vico (1668-1774) - especially his New science - is a post-Revolutionary phenomenon. Stressing the elements that keep society together by promoting a sense of belonging, Vico's philosophy helped shape a new Italian identity and intellectual class. Poet and philosopher Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837) responded perceptively to the spreading and manipulation of Vico's ideas, but to what extent can he be considered Vico's heir? Through examining the reasons behind the success of the New science in early nineteenth-century Italy, Martina Piperno uncovers the cultural trends, debates, and obsessions fostered by Vico's work. She reconstructs the penetration of Vico-related discourses in circles and environments frequented by Leopardi, and establishes and analyses a latent Vico-Leopardi relationship. Her highly original reading sees Leopardi reacting to the tensions of his time, receiving Vico's message indirectly without a need to draw directly from the source. By exploring the oblique influence of Vico's thought on Leopardi, Martina Piperno highlights the unique character of Italian modernity and its tendency to renegotiate tradition and innovation, past and future.

Table of Contents

Note on conventions Introduction i. Vico's legacy, Vico's 'heir' ii. Diffraction iii. The structure of this work 1. Forms of Italian modernity i. The power of the origins ii. Belief 2. Principium i. The pride, the origins and the destiny of the nation ii. Epics, poetry, creation and nation-building 3. Fictio i. Redefining fiction ii. Translating and mediating the ancient world iii. Was Vico Classicist or Romantic? iv. Fiction and/as belief 4. Mythos i. Mytho-logein: Vico and Leopardi as mythologists ii. Towards 'Alla Primavera': Leopardi's itineraries in myth (1815-1818) iii. 'Alla Primavera': about (un)poetic logic 5. Philology and epos i. Florence 1827-1828: refoundation, recovery, reconstruction ii. Zibaldone 4311-4417: Leopardi inside Homer's system 6. Recourse i. Rereading Vico in post-Revolutionary Naples: history, progress, perfectibility ii. 'Cantare la religione civile': Vico's ideas in poetry iii. Regress, disbelief and fable in Leopardi's last works Conclusion Bibliography Index

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