Italian literature: The Napoleonic Era and the Risorgimento
The Napoleonic Era and the Risorgimento
The Napoleonic period was both classical and romantic. The poetry of Vincenzo Monti typifies the first direction, and the work of Ugo Foscolo belongs to the second. A distinguishing feature of Italian romanticism was its political involvement in the struggle for Italian independence, the Risorgimento. Poems, historical novels, and political works, such as Giuseppe Mazzini's, attest to this.
Alessandro Manzoni's literary conversion included the rejection of classical mythology in favor of Christian subject matter, and of classical tragedy for romantic drama. His historical novel,
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- The Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
- The Napoleonic Era and the Risorgimento
- The Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
- The Renaissance
- The Fourteenth Century
- The Thirteenth Century
- Bibliography
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