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Love's Wounds takes an in-depth look at the widespread language of violence and abjection in early modern European love poetry. Beginning in fourteenth-century Italy, this book shows how Petrarch established a pattern of inequality between suffering poet and exalted Beloved rooted in political parrhēsia. Sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century French and English poets reshaped his model into an idiom of extravagant brutality coded to their own historical circumstances. Cynthia N. Nazarian argues that these poets exaggerated the posture of the downtrodden lover, adapting the rhetoric of powerless desire to forge a new "countersovereignty" from within the heart of vulnerability-a potentially revolutionary position through which to challenge cultural, religious, and political authority. Creating a secular equivalent to the martyr, early modern sonneteers crafted a voice that was both critical and unstoppable because it suffered.Love's Wounds tracks the development of the countersovereign voice from Francesco Petrarca to Maurice Scève, Joachim du Bellay, Théodore-Agrippa d'Aubigné, Edmund Spenser, and William Shakespeare. Through interdisciplinary and transnational analyses, Nazarian reads early modern sonnets as sites of contestation and collaboration and rewrites the relationship between early modern literary forms.
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Reviews
"Nazarian's study has the great merit of proposing a thought-provoking new way of understanding the rhetoric of Petrarchan lyric, and of assaying the heuristic value of a bold and clearly articulated thesis."
RENAISSANCE QUARTERLY
"An engaging account of post-Petrarchan literary history, rigorous in its individual analyses... Stands as an important and stimulating study of how much political meaning might flow from love's wounds."
SIXTEENTH CENTURY JOURNAL
"In examining love's wounds, Nazarian maintains this focus on the poet's psychology, but as he articulates it on his own terms and for political ends. She builds upon it to demonstrate how this lowliness serves to raise the poet's voice in the political sphere."
MODERN PHILOLOGY