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Kapitel
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Contributors xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Material Contexts
- 1. Text and (Inter)Face: The Catchwords in Boccaccio’s Autograph of the Decameron 27
- 2. Reading Boccaccio’s Paratexts: Dedications as Thresholds between Worlds 48
-
Part Two: Social Contexts: Friendship
- 3. Boccaccio on Friendship (Theory and Practice) 81
- 4. Among Boccaccio’s Friends: A Profi le of Mainardo Cavalcanti 98
-
Part Three: Social Contexts: Gender, Marriage, and the Law
- 5. Reading Like a Woman: Gendering Compassion in the Elegia di Madonna Fiammetta 109
- 6. The Economics of Conjugal Debt from Gratian’s Decretum to Decameron 2.10: Boccaccio, Canon Law, and the Loss of Interest in Sex 133
- 7. Authority and Misogamy in Boccaccio’s Trattatello in laude di Dante 164
- 8. What Turns on Whether Women Are Human for Boccaccio and Christine de Pizan? 189
-
Part Four: Political and Authorial Contexts: On Famous Women
- 9. On She-Wolves and Famous Women: Boccaccio, Politics, and the Neapolitan Court 219
- 10. Christine Transforms Boccaccio: Gendered Authorship in the De mulieribus claris and the Cité des dames 246
- 11. Reading Like a Frenchwoman: Christine de Pizan’s Treatment of Boccaccio’s Johanna I and Andrea Acciaiuoli 260
-
Part Five: Literary Contexts and Intertexts
- 12. A Persian in a Pear Tree: Middle Eastern Analogues for Pirro/Pyrrhus 305
- 13. Splitting Pants and Pigs: The Fabliau “Barat et Haimet” and Narrative Strategies in Decameron 8.5 and 8.6 344
- 14. The Tragicomedy of Lament: La Celestina and the Elegiac Legacy of Boccaccio’s Fiammetta 365
- 15. Sins, Sex, and Secrets: The Legacy of Confession from the Decameron to the Heptaméron 403
- Index 425
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Contributors xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Material Contexts
- 1. Text and (Inter)Face: The Catchwords in Boccaccio’s Autograph of the Decameron 27
- 2. Reading Boccaccio’s Paratexts: Dedications as Thresholds between Worlds 48
-
Part Two: Social Contexts: Friendship
- 3. Boccaccio on Friendship (Theory and Practice) 81
- 4. Among Boccaccio’s Friends: A Profi le of Mainardo Cavalcanti 98
-
Part Three: Social Contexts: Gender, Marriage, and the Law
- 5. Reading Like a Woman: Gendering Compassion in the Elegia di Madonna Fiammetta 109
- 6. The Economics of Conjugal Debt from Gratian’s Decretum to Decameron 2.10: Boccaccio, Canon Law, and the Loss of Interest in Sex 133
- 7. Authority and Misogamy in Boccaccio’s Trattatello in laude di Dante 164
- 8. What Turns on Whether Women Are Human for Boccaccio and Christine de Pizan? 189
-
Part Four: Political and Authorial Contexts: On Famous Women
- 9. On She-Wolves and Famous Women: Boccaccio, Politics, and the Neapolitan Court 219
- 10. Christine Transforms Boccaccio: Gendered Authorship in the De mulieribus claris and the Cité des dames 246
- 11. Reading Like a Frenchwoman: Christine de Pizan’s Treatment of Boccaccio’s Johanna I and Andrea Acciaiuoli 260
-
Part Five: Literary Contexts and Intertexts
- 12. A Persian in a Pear Tree: Middle Eastern Analogues for Pirro/Pyrrhus 305
- 13. Splitting Pants and Pigs: The Fabliau “Barat et Haimet” and Narrative Strategies in Decameron 8.5 and 8.6 344
- 14. The Tragicomedy of Lament: La Celestina and the Elegiac Legacy of Boccaccio’s Fiammetta 365
- 15. Sins, Sex, and Secrets: The Legacy of Confession from the Decameron to the Heptaméron 403
- Index 425