Affiliation:
1. University of Cambridge
Abstract
Although—unusually, for an early modern woman writer—Vittoria
Colonna has long been considered part of the canon, several factors have
inhibited a true appreciation of her importance as a literary innovator
and model. The current critical moment is conducive to a re-examination
of her significance, in the light of recent research on the early modern
Italian tradition of women’s writing, on the Catholic Reform movement
and its literary expression, and on developments in Italian literature in
the last four decades of the sixteenth century. Consideration of these
factors reveal Colonna as a figure of wide-reaching influence in her time
and a powerful shaping influence on later traditions of Italian literature,
in the late Renaissance and beyond.
Publisher
Amsterdam University Press