Book Chapter
Violent Language in Early Fifteenth-century Italy: the Emotions of Invectives
Andrea Rizzi
Violence and Emotion in Early Modern Europe | Routledge | Published : 2015
Abstract
Early modern Italian audiences were accustomed to hearing and exchanging insults publicly. Italian public and semi-public spaces echoed with these violent communications targeting another individual, group, or institution. Negative language had the potential to cause social strife and was for this reason often controlled and users punished. Latin scholars of early Quattrocento Italy exchanged highly codified and literary invectives. A large corpus of this literary vilification exists and yet it has attracted very little attention from Renaissance scholars. This article investigates the effect and affect of humanist invectives in early fifteenth-century Italy and reveals the performative and ..
View full abstractFunding Acknowledgements
I wish to thank the Australian Research Council for supporting my research as a Future Fellow.