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“The Beauty that Kills Me”: the Death of Lyric Person and the Birth of the Poet in Joachim Du Bellay’S Book of Sonnets the Olive (1550)

Vladimir Avdonin ()
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Vladimir Avdonin: National Research University Higher School of Economics

HSE Working papers from National Research University Higher School of Economics

Abstract: The study analyzes Sonnets 63, 65 and 69 as the key texts of the enlarged version of Joachim Du Bellay’s The Olive. In the sequence of sonnets, some loci communes of “love poems” (Amours) such as innamoramento or description of the lady’s beauty form a kind of a “new beginning”. The paper shows how Du Bellay gradually implants the Neoplatonic and religious motifs that link the middle of his new book to its beginning and its end. Another intertextual link, which is explored, is reference to Petrarch’s Canzoniere in the sonnets 63 and 69. If Petrarch’s lyric person regrets his errors leaving him to guiltiness, Du Bellay’s lyric person sees his defeat as Amor’s providence, and the defeat suddenly changes in discovery of heavenly beauty. The study demonstrates that Du Bellay addresses the ideas of Neoplatonism in order to induct and strengthen the vertical opposition of the world of earth (closely linked to suffering) and the world of heaven. Meanwhile, the poet differs from the strict followers of Neoplatonism, insisting that not the lady but Amor is the real converging point between the two worlds

Keywords: sonnet; lyric narrative; composition of a book of poetry; Neoplatonism; Joachim Du Bellay (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Z (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 13 pages
Date: 2017
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-his
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Published in WP BRP Series: Literary Studies / LS, March 2017, pages 1-13

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hig:wpaper:20/ls/2017

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