Celestina in Venice: Piety, Pornography, Poligrafi
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7203/Celestinesca.27.20021Keywords:
Celestina Venetian edition 1556, History of the book, pornography, polygraphAbstract
Th i se s s a yi s a contribution to the reception history of the Celestina among Span-ish-speaking, possibly Jewish, editors and readers living in Venice in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. As such, it utilizes the methodology of the field known as history of the book to explore the circumstances of produc-tion and consumption of this cultural artifact. Who wanted to publish a Spanish-language edition of the Celestina in Venice in 1556? And who wanted to read it? Furthermore, who might have wanted to prohibit such a book? Through careful study of prefatory matter, woodcut illustrations, lexicographical apparatus, and marginal annotations by two different early readers, the author concludes that answers to some of these questions may be encountered in the literary culture of the poligrafi and their dual preoccupations with piety and pornography.
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