Saturday, May 30, 2020
Dido - Literature Essay Samples
In 1362, Renaissance scholar Giovanni Boccaccio wrote Famous Women, in which he analyzed female characters from Classical texts. Other Italian scholars at the time devoted their efforts to studying male heroes and gods, but Boccaccio brought attention to these women who oftentimes existed solely to benefit the hero as romantic interests or appear as goddesses bestowing wisdom for a few lines before departing. Most notably is his analysis of Dido, the queen of Carthage from The Aeneid. His celebration of the queen, however, becomes instead a rigidly Christian perspective of her behavior in the text as Boccaccio views her through a Christian lens, and his portrayal of a mythological character from Roman loses its accuracy in favor of glorification. Boccaccioââ¬â¢s tone in his interpretation of Dido contradicts The Aeneid through his decision to disregard many of Didoââ¬â¢s actions in order to depict an idealized Christian image of the queen as a martyr of chastity. In many Classical texts, women are almost never in positions of power, expected to be dutiful and submissive to men. At the beginning of his analysis, it seems as if Boccaccio deviates from that stereotype, beginning with praise of the queen: ââ¬Å"O Dido, venerable and eternal model of unsullied womanhood!â⬠(Boccaccio 1). However, Boccaccio does not dwell on her role as queen of Carthage, he instead uses Dido to push a Christian ideal of a womanââ¬â¢s behavior. ââ¬Å"If they [Christian women] can, let them mediate upon how you shed your chaste blood especially women for whom it is a trivial matter to drift into second, third, and even more marriagesâ⬠(Boccaccio 1). In Boccaccioââ¬â¢s work, Dido is defined in terms of her widowhood. In The Aeneid, Dido is defined by her strength after fleeing from her murderous brother. ââ¬Å"A woman leads. They landed at the place where now you see the citadels and high walls of new Carthage rising; and then they bought the lan d called Byrsa, ââ¬Å"The Hideâ⬠, after the name of that transactionâ⬠(Virgil, 14, 516-520). The transaction refers to Didoââ¬â¢s craftiness as she marks out land for her people, a story Boccaccio does not to mention. Boccaccio does not acknowledge Didoââ¬â¢s skillfulness as queen. He speaks of Dido in abstraction, creating a stereotype of a chaste widow refusing to betray her husband with another man. Boccaccioââ¬â¢s adherence to the Christian beliefs of a womenââ¬â¢s modesty falters against The Aeneid with the relationship of Dido and Aeneas. Aeneas is the catalyst for the queenââ¬â¢s suicide, stirring up Didoââ¬â¢s psychosis with his departure. This relationship is absent from Boccaccioââ¬â¢s description. Aeneas is not mentioned. Boccaccio focuses on Didoââ¬â¢s reputation and how her chastity is an example to other women. He addresses her suicide with a calm tone, revering a martyr: ââ¬Å"Rather than marry again, rather than break her holy resolve, she died by her own hand, steadfast in spirit, unshaken in determinationâ⬠(Boccaccio 1). However, in The Aeneid, Didoââ¬â¢s suicide is far from peaceful. The act has a frantic, chaotic tone with Dido caught up in insanity over the disappearance of the man she has fallen for. ââ¬Å"But Dido, desperate, beside herself with awful undertakings, eyes bloodshot and rolling, and her quivering cheeks flecked with stains and pale coming death, now bursts across the inner courtyards of her palace. She mounts in madness that high pyre, unsheathes the Dardan sword, a gift not sought for such an endâ⬠(Virgil, 101, 888-895). She is not the image of Boccaccioââ¬â¢s martyr with her flushed cheeks and desperation. Her ââ¬Å"holy resolveâ⬠(Boccaccio 1) is shattered and she lashes out with a savagery that is very different from Boccaccioââ¬â¢s Dido who goes ââ¬Å"to her death for the sake of fleeting reputationâ⬠(Boccaccio 1). ââ¬Å"Goes to her deathâ⬠implies an act of peaceful sacrifice in loyalty to her husband. However Dido does not go quietly in the original text bringing about frenzied, vengeful destruction. ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËI shall die unavenged but I shall dieâ⬠¦May the savage Dardan drink with his own eyes this fire from the deep and take with him the omen of my deathââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (Virgil, 101, 910-913). Her death triggers chaos, not Boccaccioââ¬â¢s reinfor cement of chastity. ââ¬Å"The blade is foaming with her blood, her hands are bloodstainedâ⬠¦Shrieks of women sound through the houses; heavens echo mighty wailingsâ⬠(Virgil, 101, 915-921) Didoââ¬â¢s position is unique; she is queen who is equal to the hero, facing great adversity in forging new kingdoms. However ever, successes are short-lived as her passion drives her to suicide over Aeneas. In Famous Women, Giovanni Boccaccioââ¬â¢s views of Dido are completely misconstrued from the original text. He discusses Dido through a narrow Christian perspective, dwelling on her role as a widow not as a powerful queen. He reconceives her suicide as a martyrdom for chastity, as a woman who never falls prey to lust, although Didoââ¬â¢s suicide in The Aeneid occurs for the opposite reason ââ¬â she stops thinking of her husband, she falls in love Aeneas who has left and is driven mad by her desire to the point of suicide. Boccaccio takes Didoââ¬â¢s insanity and paints over it with a tone of his own beliefs, using Dido as a mythological symbol of Christian ideology all while ignoring the actual context of her actions, reducing her a stereotype of an obedient widow rather than exploring the chaotic tone of her lunacy with the violence she produces with her suicide, caught in the throes of lusting madness.
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