
Martin McLaughlin (ed.)
et al.
Published online:
31 January 2012
Published in print:
15 November 2007
Online ISBN:
9780191734649
Print ISBN:
9780197264133
Contents
Chapter
18 Between Tradition and Transgression: Amelia Rosselli’s Petrarch
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Pages
300–317
-
Published:November 2007
Cite
Tandello, Emmanuela, 'Between Tradition and Transgression: Amelia Rosselli’s Petrarch', in Martin McLaughlin, Letizia Panizza, and Peter Hainsworth (eds), Petrarch in Britain: Interpreters, Imitators, and Translators over 700 years (London , 2007; online edn, British Academy Scholarship Online, 31 Jan. 2012), https://doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264133.003.0019, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines the influence of Petrarch on the poetry of Amelia Rosselli. It argues that Rosselli's poetry can be seen to reaffirm the enduring value of the Petrarchan legacy at the close of the second millennium and shows how Petrarchan discourse operates within her poetry as a veritable ghost in the machine. It suggests of Rosselli's three major books, Serie ospedaliera appears to be the one in which the dialogue with Petrarch is more explicitly and productively engaged.
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