TY - JOUR
T1 - German-Italian Literary Connections in the Late Middle Ages
T2 - Boccaccio's the Decameron in Light of Some Late Medieval German Narrative Precedents
AU - Classen, Albrecht
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston 2020.
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/11/1
Y1 - 2020/11/1
N2 - Comparative research focused on medieval literature continues to be characterized by many desiderata, especially with regard to the fruitful relationships between late medieval verse narratives, mæren, and the famous Italian storyteller Boccaccio and his Decameron. This paper brings to light four significant Middle High German verse narratives from the 13th or early-14th century that demonstrate remarkable similarities with stories contained in Boccaccio's Decameron. While the study of Boccaccio's sources has traditionally been focused primarily on Old French (fabliaux) or Latin sources, here I introduce a number of texts that were composed just a few decades earlier and which express, in surprising parallel, strikingly similar themes that could be straight from the textbook the Italian poet might have drawn from. We have, of course, no specific evidence as to Boccaccio's direct familiarity with late-medieval German literature, but the motif analysis reveals major parallels between the examples in The Decameron and in those mæren.
AB - Comparative research focused on medieval literature continues to be characterized by many desiderata, especially with regard to the fruitful relationships between late medieval verse narratives, mæren, and the famous Italian storyteller Boccaccio and his Decameron. This paper brings to light four significant Middle High German verse narratives from the 13th or early-14th century that demonstrate remarkable similarities with stories contained in Boccaccio's Decameron. While the study of Boccaccio's sources has traditionally been focused primarily on Old French (fabliaux) or Latin sources, here I introduce a number of texts that were composed just a few decades earlier and which express, in surprising parallel, strikingly similar themes that could be straight from the textbook the Italian poet might have drawn from. We have, of course, no specific evidence as to Boccaccio's direct familiarity with late-medieval German literature, but the motif analysis reveals major parallels between the examples in The Decameron and in those mæren.
KW - "Der münch mit dem genßlein,"
KW - Boccaccio
KW - cross-Alpine connections
KW - German-Italian literary connections
KW - Jansen Enikel
KW - late medieval literary network
KW - reception history
KW - Ruprecht von Würzburg
KW - Rüdiger von Müner
KW - shared motif history
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U2 - 10.1515/arcadia-2020-2001
DO - 10.1515/arcadia-2020-2001
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85096340783
VL - 55
SP - 260
EP - 278
JO - Arcadia
JF - Arcadia
SN - 0003-7982
IS - 2
ER -