Project

In Looking Back, Becoming Modern: Shifting Discourses on 'Latin Renaissance' in the French and Italian Literary Fields, 1870-1915

Code
1289524N
Duration
01 October 2023 → 30 September 2026
Funding
Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO)
Research disciplines
  • Humanities and the arts
    • Comparative literature studies
    • Literatures in French
    • Literatures in Italian
    • Literary history
Keywords
Western Europe Southern Europe 19th Century 20th Century French Italian Comparative Language and text analysis European modernism European identity Cosmopolitanism Nationalism Literary studies History
 
Project description

When we think about the Renaissance, we mainly remember the enticing legacy of its artworks. Yet, the myth of Renaissance as a historical period of ‘rebirth’ has also assumed symbolic values in debates on cultures and nations worldwide, from the USA to Japan. Between the late 19th and the early 20th century, the symbolic framework of Renaissance was highly prominent among French and Italian thinkers who partook in debates that go under the umbrella term of Latin Renaissance. Latin Renaissance defended the dignity of the so-called Latin cultures against the growing prestige of Northern nations and literatures. It also contested Northern-centric visions of Europe that professed the alleged backwardness of Latin Europe. As I will show, the longing for Latin rebirth led French and Italian thinkers to mobilise discursive dichotomies (Renaissance-Reformation, Classicism-Romanticism, etc) that served to delegitimise Northern supremacy and to re-establish their own literatures and cultures. By examining literary debates on Latin Renaissance, I will tackle its various faces. I will prove how the shifting meanings of rebirth mobilised in the debates relied on competing visions of the historical Renaissance & its legacy in literary history. As such, my project opens ground-breaking research paths in the field of European Literary Studies.