Wayne A. Rebhorn
Author of The Decameron : A New Translation, Contexts, Criticism (Norton Critical Edition)
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Image credit: By Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29306553
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Works by Wayne A. Rebhorn
The Decameron : A New Translation, Contexts, Criticism (Norton Critical Edition) (1977) — Editor — 380 copies, 4 reviews
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How Giovanni Boccaccio avoided a horrible death at the hands of the Church is amazing. In this selection of 21 of the 100 stories that comprise the Decameron, Boccaccio puts clergymen in scenes of debauchery that would amaze even a modern reader. In one of the excellent pieces of contemporary criticism included in this volume, it is pointed out that the Church was fairly tolerant of non-heretical criticism until the Reformation, whereupon the Decameron was promptly banned. Boccaccio himself show more became ashamed of the work later in life and would have undoubtedly had all copies burned if possible. Thank goodness he wasn't able to do that because The Decameron is apparently considered one of the most influential early renaissance works (maybe even influencing Chaucer to write The Canterbury Tales, for example).
I don't want this review to get flagged, so I won't go into any detail about the stories. Suffice it to say that sex, greed, and general bawdiness, often involving clergy and even cloistered nuns are featured prominently in the stories, which Boccaccio claims that he wrote for the entertainment of young ladies.
Pretty good stuff, but not for the faint of heart. show less
I don't want this review to get flagged, so I won't go into any detail about the stories. Suffice it to say that sex, greed, and general bawdiness, often involving clergy and even cloistered nuns are featured prominently in the stories, which Boccaccio claims that he wrote for the entertainment of young ladies.
Pretty good stuff, but not for the faint of heart. show less
Nice selection of tales from Boccaccio's classic work--I really only wanted to get a taste anyway. I especially liked the stories about Saladin and the three rings; the monk Rustico and putting the Devil in Hell; Isabetta and the Pot of Basil (the basis for Keats' poem); Peronella and the Jar (clearly taken directly from Apuleius); and the Abbess awaking in the dark. The Norton edition has a lot of contemporary and modern criticism, including a final look at the overall meaning of the work, show more which I agree seems to come down to love leading to fame or earthly glory. show less
The Decameron : A New Translation, Contexts, Criticism (Norton Critical Edition) by Giovanni Boccaccio
As the Norton edition by Wayne Rebhorn is abridged, I only read the introduction, which is very good, and the sources, which are curious, and the commentary, which is painfully dull, but helpful.
2022
https://www.librarything.com/topic/337810#7797846
2022
https://www.librarything.com/topic/337810#7797846
"This volume contains twenty-one of the hundred novel that compose Boccaccio's masterpiece."
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