Dolce Stil Novo or stilnovismo, is the name given to the most important
literary movement of the 13th century in Italy. Influenced by both Sicilian and
Tuscan poetry, its main
theme is Love. And Amore are indeed topoi in the major works of the period. The
name Dolce Stil Novo was used for the first time by Dante Alighieri, in fact
when he arrives in the Purgatory he met Bonagiunta Orbicciani, a 13th-century
Italian poet, who tells Dante that Dante himself, Guinizzelli and Cavalcanti
had been able to create a new genre: a stil novo.
Precursors to the dolce stil novo are found in the Provençal
works of the troubadours, such as the Genoese Lanfranc Cigala. The artists of
the stil novo are called stilnovisti. Compared to its precursors, the poetry we
find in the Dolce Stil Novo is superior in quality and more intellectual: a
more refined poetry with regular use of metaphors and symbolism, as well as
subtle double meanings. The adoration of the female beauty is explicitly portrayed
by the Dolce Stil Novo poet, who frequently delves into deep introspection. In
fact it has been argued by many literary critics that introspection in Italian
literary works was first introduced by the Stil Novo poets, and later developed
by Francesco Petrarca. Poetry from this school is also full of vivid
descriptions of female beauty, frequently comparing the desired woman to a
creature from paradise. The woman is described as an 'angel' or as 'a bridge to
God'. Rather than being material in nature, the 'Love' of the Dolce Stil Novo
is a sort of 'Divine Love'.
The two main concepts are thus brought together as the poet
enters his interior world to express his most inner feelings which are caused
by an excessively divine female beauty. The first expression of this style of
writing is credited to Guido Guinizzelli and his poem Al cor gentil rempaira
sempre amore, whereas the major exponent of this school of poetry was Dante
Alighieri, who is most famous for his Divina Commedia. The importance of the Dolce
Stil Novo lies in the fact that apart from being the manifestation of the first
true literary tradition in Italy, it ennobled the Tuscan vernacular, which was
soon destined to become the Italian national language. The Stilnovisti
influenced the later Catalan poet Melchior de Gualbes.
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