Erotic Hermaphrodyte and Genderless Reason: Tullia d’Aragona and Benedetto Varchi in the “Dialogue of the Infinity of Love”

Authors

  • Luca D’Ascia Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6093/sigma.v0i4.7496

Keywords:

female culture, Aristotelianism, Renaissance, Platonic love, dialogue

Abstract

This paper aims to discuss from different points of view the Dialogue of the Infinity of Love of the 16th century courtesan Tullia d’Aragona, reconstructing its historical context. It looks at the partnership between the writer and the competent man of letters Benedetto Varchi in order to integrate the promotion of female culture in an ambitious project of philosophical dissemination in Tuscan vernacular. The image of the cultivated lady elaborated in the Dialogue is compared with the contemporary and very opposite paradigm of Sperone Speroni’s Dialogo d’amore. While in this text woman seems to be relegated to an inferior dimension of irrationality, the Dialogue of the Infinity of Love provides the interlocutor “Tullia” with a considerable degree of autonomy as a thinking subject. The paper examines then the role played by Girolamo Muzio, editor of the Dialogue, with regard to the Rime of the poetess and his place in the midst of the religious debate of the time, stressing her opposition to the “evangelical” trends. It is also considered the relevance of the Dialogue as a specimen of vernacular Aristotelianism, focusing on such controversial issues as infinity and immortality of the soul. The “party game” between the two main interlocutors allows avoid heterodox conclusions. The influential Dialoghi d’amore of Leone Ebreo are finally analyzed as the main source of the text of Tullia and Varchi, pointing at a basic difference of literary register which reduces the intellectual mysticism of the Sephardic author to a more worldly level.

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Author Biography

Luca D’Ascia, Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa

Luca d’Ascia was born in Rome on 19 September 1964 and studied Modern History and Comparative Literature at the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa and the University of Heidelberg. He has taught Italian language and culture at the University of Bielefeld and is currently a researcher at the Scuola Normale. He has dedicated numerous studies to Renaissance culture, including: Erasmo e l’umanesimo romano, Firenze, Olschki 1991; Il Corano e la tiara. L’epistola di Enea Silvio Piccolomini (papa Pio II) a Maometto II sultano dei Turchi, Bologna, Pendragon 2001; Cuerpo e imagen en el Renacimiento, Medellín, Editorial Universidad de Antioquia 2003; Machiavelli e i suoi interpreti, Bologna, Pendragon 2006, as well as the bilingual critical edition of L. B. Alberti’s Intercenali in collaboration with Franco Bacchelli (Bologna, Pendragon 2003). He recently published a bilingual critical edition with Italian translation of the Erasmus’s Colloquia (Turin, Loescher, 2017). In the contemporary field he has dealt with issues related to the aesthetics of the image and the representation of cultural diversity. His publications in this field include the monograph La lingua scritta della realtà. Studi sull’estetica di Pier Paolo Pasolini (Bologna, Pendragon, 2012), (Bologna, Pendragon, 2012), the collective volume Il nemico di casa. Diversità culturale e conflitto politico, Bologna, Pendragon 1999 and Tessendo la voce. Letteratura indigena contemporanea in Chiapas. Antologia e saggio critico, Roma, Aracne, 2009.

Published

2020-12-21

How to Cite

D’Ascia, L. (2020). Erotic Hermaphrodyte and Genderless Reason: Tullia d’Aragona and Benedetto Varchi in the “Dialogue of the Infinity of Love”. SigMa - Rivista Di Letterature Comparate, Teatro E Arti Dello Spettacolo, (4), 461–505. https://doi.org/10.6093/sigma.v0i4.7496

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