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The Decameron

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Title: The Decameron


1
The Decameron Heptameron
  • CNE/ENG 120
  • 11/15/04

2
The Decameron
  • Author Giovanni Boccaccio
  • Culture Italian (Florentine)
  • Time c. 1353 CE
  • Genre prose fiction (novella, or short stories)
  • Names to know Alibech, Griselda

3
Significance
  • Held to be the greatest achievement in prose
    fiction in a vernacular language of Southern
    Europe during the Middle Ages.
  • His work helped to inspire the development of
    Humanism in the Renaissance.

4
Decameron
  • 100 stories told over 10 days
  • Setting plague year of 1348
  • Historical note Boccaccios lover, Maria
    dAquino (Fiammetta) died in the plague he makes
    her a character in the Decameron.
  • Boccaccio was a Dante scholar, he held a teaching
    appointment in Florence he also was the first
    Italian to learn ancient Greek.

5
Framing Narrative
  • The historical plague of 1348
  • Background story Characters are all young
    aristocrats. 7 ladies and 3 gentlemen withdraw
    from Florence to their country estates to escape
    the plague.
  • 1/4 of the population died of this - the death
    rate in Florence approached 70.

6
Narrative Focus
  • Set against an event of devastating personal,
    political, and moral effects, Boccaccio focuses
    his tale on pleasure the pleasure of
    companionship, story-telling, sex.
  • The nobles agree on a plan of story-telling to
    pass the time. Each tells one tale a day
    sometimes a general topic is assigned, sometimes
    they tell what they wish.

7
Contrast with Dante
  • Think of Paolo and Francesca - their tale
    illustrates the dangers of story-telling
    (corrupted by Arthurian romance, they are doomed
    for eternity).
  • In contrast, Boccaccio emphasizes the restorative
    pleasure of story-telling and literature (oral
    and written stories).

8
Focus
  • Boccaccio tells some racy stories he also looks
    clearly at greed, wit, stupidity, and cruelty
    human reality.
  • He did influence Chaucer, although were not sure
    which works Chaucer had read.

9
Four Tales
  • We can look at these as 2 pairs.
  • 1) Melchizedek (an actual historical figure)
    outwits a ruler story advocating religious
    tolerance Alibech will outwit the monk who
    takes advantage of her tale highlights the
    problem of the religious orders not keeping to
    their vows of chastity.
  • 2) Tofano and his adulterous wife contrast with
    Gualtieri and the patient Griselda who has much
    in common with Medieval saints.

10
Introduction
  • Boccaccio describes the advent of plague, its
    physical symptoms, and its effects on morals and
    society.
  • Symptoms buboes death within 3 days of the
    appearance of symptoms.
  • Spread rapidly by contact with those sick or
    their things spread to animals. People began to
    avoid the sick their possessions.

11
Societal Breakdown
  • Boccaccio describes various types of reactions to
    the plague. All respect for the laws of God and
    man had virtually broken down.
  • Those who could, fled for the countryside.
  • This scourge had implanted so great a terror in
    the hearts of men and women that brothers
    abandoned brothers, uncles their nephews, sisters
    their brothers, and in many cases wives deserted
    their husbands. But even worse, almost
    incredible, was the fact that fathers and mothers
    refused to nurse and assist their own children.

12
Disposal of the Dead
  • Corpses left on doorsteps in the night for pick
    up the next day.
  • Mass graves in churchyard trenches.
  • 50,000 died in Florence from March - July.

13
The Characters Meet
  • Where do the characters meet?
  • How old were the women, and what was their
    relationship to one another?
  • Pampinea proposes that they withdraw from the
    city to their various country estates, shunning
    moral looseness while feasting and merrymaking
    within bounds.
  • She presents their families as dead or fled.

14
Arrival in Fiesole
  • The 7 women meet up with 3 men, of whom Dioneo is
    most attractive and witty. The men provide some
    protection.
  • They agree to tell stories in the heat of the
    day, to amuse themselves.

15
1st day, 3rd Story The Three Rings
  • Filomena tells it. Moral prudence brings its
    reward.
  • Saladin, sultan of Egypt, approached the
    money-lender Melchizedek for money. To get it, he
    resolved to use force in the guise of reason.
  • Asked him which of the 3 laws (Jewish, Saracen,
    or the Christian) he thought truly authentic.
  • Melchizedek saw through him, replied so as not to
    fall into the trap. Tells a story about 3 men and
    their rings.

16
The Story
  • The great, wealthy man left his ring to one of
    his sons, who then left it to his heir, etc.
    Finally it came to one man who loved his 3 sons
    equally. He promised it to each, had 2 others
    made. They then could not decide which was heir.
  • He applied this to the Sultans question - each
    of the religions considers itself the heir of
    God, but the question of which one is truly heir
    hasnt been decided.
  • What did the Sultan do then?

17
3rd Day, 10th Story Alibech
  • Dioneo is the narrator. Purpose to reveal how to
    put the Devil back in Hell.
  • Location Tunisia
  • Alibech, a fourteen-year-old, seeking to serve
    God in the best and easiest way
  • At the advice of a Christian, she sets out for
    the desert, where she finds a series of hermits
    huts.

18
The Devil
  • The hermits she meets are afraid to take her in
    because of her prettiness - afraid lest the
    devil should catch them unawares.
  • The young hermit Rustico takes her in, anxious
    to prove to himself that he possessed a will of
    iron.
  • Succumbing to temptation, he seeks a way to
    seduce her through her desire to serve God.
  • Alibechs Hell and Rusticos Devil

19
The Taming of Hell
  • Meanwhile, Alibechs family dies in a fire back
    in Gafsa she inherits everything.
  • Neerbal, who had gone through his own fortune,
    sets out to find and marry her.
  • The story coined a proverbial saying
  • the most agreeable way of serving God was to put
    the devil back in Hell.

20
7th Day, 4th Story The Woman Who Locked Her
Husband Out
  • Told by Lauretta.
  • She addresses Love, in keeping with Dioneos
    order that all stories that day be devoted to
    wives who have tricked their husbands.
  • Premise The husband Tofano is irrationally
    jealous of his wife, who had given him no reason
    to be. Over time, she resolves to make him suffer
    for this ill which hitherto he had feared
    without cause.

21
Infidelity
  • In order to have a chance to be unfaithful, Monna
    Ghita encourages Tofano to drink.
  • Once he was drunk passed out, she carried on
    with her lover, both at her home and at his
    house.
  • Eventually, Tofano figured out that she herself
    was not drinking, making him suspect she was up
    to something.

22
The Plot Thickens
  • Feigning drunkenness, Tofano returns home. After
    his wife slips out to her lover, he locks the
    door behind her and awaited her return by the
    window.
  • What did Monna threaten to do if Tofano did not
    let her in? How did he react?
  • How does the story end?

23
10th Day, 10th Story The Patient Griselda
  • Gualtieri, the Marquis of Saluzzo, gives in to
    his subjects desire and marries. However,
    instead of a noblewoman, he marries a peasant,
    Griselda.
  • Before marrying her, he makes her promise that
    she would always try to please him never be
    upset by anything he did or said. She also swore
    to obey him.
  • What does Gualtieri do to Griselda, over the
    years? How does she react to his cruelty?

24
The Moral?
  • Griselda shares much of the character of Medieval
    saints, which perhaps accounts for the tremendous
    popularity of this story.
  • Petrarch compared Griselda to Job.

25
The Heptameron
  • Author Marguerite de Navarre
  • Time early - mid 16th c. CE
  • Culture French
  • Genre prose fiction, novella, short stories
  • She introduced artists of the Italian Renaissance
    to the French court. This work is a tribute to
    it, by way of Boccaccio.

26
Historical Context
  • After the Reformation, France suffered social and
    religious upheavals.
  • Marguerite was central to the cultural
    religious conflicts of her day . . . Paying a
    price for her reformist ideas.
  • Issues debated in the tales the rights of wives
    within marriage, the legitimacy of rape, and the
    scandals perpetrated by Franciscan monks.

27
8 Days of Tale-Telling
  • Narrative Frame 10 chatterers (5 men, 5 women)
    are escaping from a variety of dangers (floods,
    bandits) when they take refuge in an abbey. To
    pass the time, they tell stories.
  • They react to the stories told, discussing and
    debating their significance relevance to their
    own lives. Unlike those of the Decameron, the
    tales here are moral conundrums.
  • The rule none should tell a true story.

28
Unfinished Unpublished
  • It seems that the Heptameron was unfinished at
    Marguerites death - she did not title it, and
    she did not publish it.
  • It has no definitive text - the tales exist in 17
    different manuscripts.

29
1st Day, 5th Story Two Friars a Shrewd
Ferrywoman
  • First day is devoted to stories of low tricks
    played by women on men and by men on women.
  • Narrator Geburon
  • Concern the corruptness of friars
  • When the Franciscan Friars decide to rape the
    ferrywoman, what does she do?
  • How does the story end?

30
4th Day, 32nd Story The Woman Who Drank from Her
Lovers Skull
  • On the 4th day, the theme is the virtue
    long-suffering of ladies in the winning over of
    their husbands, of the prudence of men with
    respect to their wives for the preservation of
    the honor of their house lineage.
  • Narrator Oisille.
  • Concern The importance of defending honor

31
The Mystery
  • Bernage, when staying the night at a certain
    house, sees a mysterious beautiful woman, dressed
    in black, drink from a skull.
  • Who is this woman, and why is she drinking from
    the skull? Whose skull is it?
  • What advice does Bernage give the husband? Did
    the husband take it?

32
4th Day, 36th Story The Husband Who Punished
His Faithless Wife By Means of a Salad
  • Narrator Ennasuite
  • Main characters the president of the Parlement
    of Grenoble, his young wife and her lover
    Nicholas.
  • The husband learns of the affair from his loyal
    servant he obtains proof when he finds Nicholas
    and his wife in bed together.
  • When faced with his wifes adultery, what is the
    husbands concern? How does he deal with the
    servant and Nicholas? With his wife?

33
8th Day, 71st Story The Wife Who Came Back from
the Dead
  • The 8th day is devoted to the most foolish and
    the most true stories.
  • Parlemente (Marguerite herself?) tells it.
  • The saddler Brimbaudier, a servant of Bacchus,
    had a good wife. When she seemed on the point of
    death, he wept and wailed. He appealed to his
    only audience, a pretty maid, eventually making a
    pass at her.
  • What was the dying wifes reaction?

34
The Moral?
  • Many of the stories concern marital infidelity,
    of both husbands and wives.
  • Compared to the stories of Tofano and Alibech in
    Boccaccio, here sexuality activity does not bring
    much pleasure.
  • Marguerite focuses on the sad aftermath of sexual
    practices, whether fulfilled or unfulfilled.
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