Rappresentare il desiderio: la statua di Isotta nella Tavola Ritonda

MURGIA, GIULIA
2013-01-01

Abstract

A desire that has been hidden for such a long time to the realms of the inexspressible will find alternative ways to begin to speak, even if this means to subject its content to a metamorphosis that could make it unrecognizable. As the dream activity translates thoughts in images, the unspeakable can be representable. This happens even in the Tavola Ritonda, one of the Italian rewritings (beginning of the 14th century) of the Prose Tristan, a 13th Arthurian French compilation. Tristan, became the unhappy husband of Iseult of the White Hands,tries to fill the absence of Iseult the Blond by realizing a statue of his lover. This episode’s model, absent from the Prose Tristan, can be found in the famous scene of the “Salle aux images” coming from Thomas, that the Tavola Ritonda rewrites in a “bourgeois” way by transforming the statue in a proper fetish symbol. This paper, that will turn to the notions of Unheimliche and Witz, will point out how the Tuscan writer canalizes the return of the repressed through ékphrasis, and how he tries to mitigate the uncanny of the inanimate double of Iseult by a comic conclusion.
2013
Tavola Ritonda; Yseut; Ékphrasis; Middle Ages; Desire
Files in This Item:
File Size Format  
4. Murgia 2013. Rappresentare il desiderio. La statua di Isotta nella Tavola Ritonda.pdf

open access

Type: versione editoriale
Size 430.89 kB
Format Adobe PDF
430.89 kB Adobe PDF View/Open

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Questionnaire and social

Share on:
Impostazioni cookie