Chiara Matraini

Chiara Matraini (1515–1604) was an Italian Renaissance writer from Lucca. Primarily known for her love poetry, composed in the style of Petrarch, she also authored a number of spiritual prose and verse texts. Matraini wrote throughout her long life, publishing her last text, the Dialoghi spirituali (1602), when she was well into her 80s. Her many projects included genres that were uncommon for women writers of her time, such as an oration on the art of war, a translation from Latin to vernacular, and several didactic religious texts. Matraini's writing demonstrates an eagerness to compose in an authoritative voice.[1]

She was married to Vincenzo Cantarini, with whom she had one son.[2] Her husband's early death apparently facilitated her active literary life. Her literary contacts included Benedetto Varchi and Lodovico Domenichi.

Selected works

  • Rime et prose, Lucca, Busdraghi, 1555.
  • Orazione d'Isocrate, Florence, Torrentino, 1556.
  • Meditationi spirituali, Lucca, Busdraghi, 1581.
  • Lettere di madonna Chiara Matraini... con la prima e seconda parte delle sue rime, Venice, Nicolò Moretti, 1597.
  • Dialoghi spirituali, Venice, Prati, 1602.
  • Rime e lettere, edited by Giovanna Rabitti, Bologna, 1989.
  • Brief discourse on the life and praises of the most blessed Virgin, in Who is Mary?, edited and translated by Susan Haskins, Chicago, 2008.
  • Selected Poetry and Prose, edited and translated by Elaine Maclachlan, Chicago, 2008.
gollark: With a blockquote, thus making me inherently superior in all conceivable ways.
gollark: I posted that, bee.
gollark: Maintaining current standards of living, and also not having everyone die due to lack of food, needs roughly current technology. Maintaining current technology requires large-scale coordination. Thus, problems.
gollark: The blurb is more descriptive.
gollark: We do *need* large-scale things. I feel like that's quite important.

References

  1. Cox, Virginia. Lyric Poetry by Women of the Italian Renaissance. The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013.
  2. /about/ University of Chicago Italian Women Writers

See also


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