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Francesco Colonna (1) (1433–1527)

Autor von Hypnerotomachia Poliphili: The Strife of Love in a Dream

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Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Colonna, Francesco
Geburtstag
1433
Todestag
1527
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Italy
Land (für Karte)
Italy
Wohnorte
Venice, Italy
Berufe
Monk
Priest
Organisationen
Dominican Order
Basilica Cattedrale Patriarcale di San Marco

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Regalo de Jaime Navidad 2023
 
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mcarmenbriones | 8 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 23, 2024 |
Desde que se imprimió en Venecia en 1499 (el mismo año que "La Celestina" en España), este libro ha sido considerado como uno de los más raros y enigmáticos que se han publicado en la historia. En un alarde de imaginación y de recursos técnicos de imprenta sorprendentes para la época, "Hypnerotomachia Polyphili" se adelanta incluso a los caligramas del siglo XX.
Se trata de una especie de novela muy misteriosa e intrincada que, además de combinar todos los conocimientos tipográficos que se tenían entonces por medio de sus abundantes y preciosas xilografías, hace alarde de ser una enciclopédica miscelánea de conocimientos arqueológicos, epigráficos, arquitectónicos, litúrgicos, gemológicos, culinarios...
Es muy conveniente; indispensable, diría yo, releer este tipo de obras para que quien confunde la mentalidad de los tiempos actuales con la de otras épocas de la historia, se dé cuenta de vez en cuando de que estamos muy lejos de penetrar en el pensamiento de la media humana de unos tiempos que han quedado ya tan lejos.
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Eucalafio | 8 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 23, 2020 |
...really one of its kind. That's all I can say. Gets a bit slow on some occasions but hey, one has to take it for what it is... and what is it? It's the "strife of love in a dream"... – Godwin has done a wonderful job with translating this monster, balancing the archaisms with readibility (if you know anything about the original version from 1499, you know what I mean!) and Thames & Hudson have done an equallly marvellous job with the design, featuring all 174 woodcuts and even setting the book with a font based on the original design five hundred years earlier!… (mehr)
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ketolus | 8 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 7, 2017 |
Described on the back cover as a strange, pagan, erotic, allegorical, mythological romance and I would add at times a tedious, difficult, but also a fascinating read for anybody interested in medieval or renaissance literature. Written in the later part of the 15th century probably by the ordained priest Francesco Colonna; it was published in Venice in 1499. One of the earliest printed books it proved to be quite an undertaking to get it set for printing with its many wood cut pictures and diagrams, its mixture of Greek, Latin and made up text in the vernacular and it’s layout on the page, which predates some of the ‘concrete’ poetry of later times.

The simple love story beneath all the allegory, dream imagery and technical details is about Poliphil’s love for Polia a nun living under strict religious orders following her survival of a plague epidemic. In Poliphil’s dream he is in a strange land where he must undergo certain trials in his search for Polia. The allegory has him escaping from the perils of the forest where his earlier life was spent and after petitioning the Gods he places himself in the hands of the five senses who lead him to freewill. He then travels with two nymphs (reason and inclination) to an abode with three doors. The doors lead to a world of religion, ambition or love and beauty and Poliphil chooses love and beauty at which point he is deserted by the nymph of reason. His journey continues and he is accompanied by a maiden carrying a torch who appears to be Polia. They reach the domain of Venus Physizoe and in the temple of Venus various rites and initiations are performed before the nymph drops her torch and becomes Polia. They journey on through a desolate city of tombs where they witness the pangs of souls tormented by crimes against love, here the book feels like something lifted from Dante’s inferno. They eventually reach a large stretch of water and Cupid’s barge approaches, they climb aboard and are taken to the island of Cythera; a magical place of gardens, groves and labyrinths. Here near the tomb of Adonis the two lovers settle down and Polia tells her side of the love story to the nymphs that surround them. Polia’s story is told in the much shorter second part of the book and it is shorn of much of the allegory of the first part and tells simply how she is wooed by Poliphil. This is a more realistic and dramatic telling of the love story and takes place in the real world, however the telling of the story ends with Poliphil waking up from his dream and regretting that he cannot recapture it.

The Hypnerotomachia Poliphili is a curious mix indeed, it seems to defy interpretation and also resists attempts to pin it down as wholly a work of the renaissance, this is because it contains so many elements of medieval writing and thought. It singularly avoids anything relating to Christianity with its subject matter being the intervention of pagan gods and its reverence for antiquity placing it firmly in the humanist tradition of the Italian renaissance. The structure of the book centered round the idea of a dream vision and its encyclopedic treatment of plants, animals, buildings and gardens harkens back to medieval times. Francesco Colonna appears to be standing at the crossroads between two periods, but perhaps it was never as clear cut as that and the Hypnerotomachia would have not seemed so out of place to readers in the early 16th century.

I mentioned earlier that the book can be a tedious read and that is because Colonna goes into the minutest detail when describing the gardens or buildings that Poliphil comes across on his journey. I found myself scanning whole sections where I soon became lost in the architectural detail. I have trouble enough in relating two dimensions into three and I am reliably informed that much of the structural detail contained in the writing would simply not work and so I soon found myself giving up on the attempt., however there are many line (woodcut) drawings to help with the visualisation and even if they are difficult to relate to at least they break up the text on the page. I got the impression that the technical details were in many ways more important than the love story, they seemed to be a celebration of renaissance learning that had been scrupulously adapted from antiquity. The love story seems to be buried in the detail, which can be frustrating for modern readers. This is certainly the case with the longer part I. In part II we are back to some sort of reality, but it is more inclined towards the reality of courtly love with Polyphil acting out all the precepts of the lover frustrated by not being able to attain his heart’s desires. The underlying story just about held my attention with the anticipation of what would happen next.

I did not find all the descriptions tedious as Colonna was obviously using his own experience when describing the processions that were a feature of Renaissance city life and his imagination does not let him down when describing cupid’s barge or the scantily clad nymphs that accompanied him. Some of these descriptions have an erotic charge, which seems a little out of place for a priestly author; but then again perhaps not. Some examples of the nymphs on the island of Cythera:

“Others covered there breasts with silken garments - breasts whiter than wintry frosts of Capricorn and pleasingly adorned with the first swelling of their bold nipples, resembling high-breasted apples with semi-globes standing out from them……; and yet others were cloaked in thin cotton that veiled their beautiful bellies and clung sportively to them…..Aschemosyne, presented herself amongst all these clothed nymphs fearlessly naked and provocative, just as though she had drunk of the Salmacian spring. In her left hand she held by its centre a sphere made from gold plates, and with her right she seductively prevented her long hair from covering her plump and wriggling buttocks. She was in a truly wanton condition, making obscene tribadic motions and rolling her eyes. With her prurient actions she resembled some shameless Gaditanian, crudely gesturing with excessive lust. The filthy Hostius, watching sodomites in concave mirrors was no worse than she.”

I enjoyed the translation by Joscelyn Godwin, which could not have been an easy one to do as Colonne had a penchant for making up his own words. Godwin has produced a text that flows smoothly most of the time with no “too modern” intrusions. There are many allusions to classical literature, but these are encompassed in the text in such a way that there is no need to look further to find their relevance. It takes some perseverance to plough through what appears to be so much superfluous detail in part I and yet this part has the dream like quality that is promised by the title of the book. I am glad I read it, but then again I am finding this period of history and its literature absolutely fascinating and so I guess it would not appeal to the more casual reader.
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baswood | 8 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 6, 2012 |

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