Decameron and the Philosophy of Storytelling: Author as Midwife and Pimp

Decameron and the Philosophy of Storytelling: Author as Midwife and Pimp

by Richard Kuhns
Decameron and the Philosophy of Storytelling: Author as Midwife and Pimp

Decameron and the Philosophy of Storytelling: Author as Midwife and Pimp

by Richard Kuhns

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Overview

In this creative and engaging reading, Richard Kuhns explores the ways in which Decameron'ssexual themes lead into philosophical inquiry, moral argument, and aesthetic and literary criticism. As he reveals the stories' many philosophical insights and literary pleasures, Kuhns also examines Decameronin the context of the nature of storytelling, its relationship to other classic works of literature, and the culture of trecento Italy.

Stories and storytelling are to be interpreted in terms of a wider cultural context that includes masks, metamorphosis, mythic themes, and character analysis, all of which Boccaccio explores with wit and subtlety. As a storyteller, Boccaccio represents himself as literary pimp, conceiving the relationship between storyteller and audience in sexual terms within a tradition that goes back as far as Socrates' conversations with the young Athenians.

As a whole, Boccaccio's great collection of stories creates a trenchant criticism of the ideas that dominated his social and cultural world. Addressed as it is to women who were denied opportunities for education, the author's stories create a university of wise and culturally observant texts. He teaches that comic, religious, sexual, and artistic themes can be seen to function as metaphors for hidden and often dangerous unorthodox thoughts.

Kuhns suggests that Decameronis one of the first self-conscious creations of what we today call "a total work of art." Throughout the stories, Boccaccio creates a detailed picture of the Florentine trecento cultural world. Giotto, Buffalmacco, and other great painters of Boccaccio's time appear in the stories. Their works and the paintings that surround the characters as they prepare to leave the plague-ridden city, with their representations of Dante, Aquinas, and other thinkers, are essential to understanding the ways the stories work with other works of art and illuminate and enlarge interpretations of Boccaccio's book.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231136082
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 05/11/2005
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.08(w) x 9.24(h) x 0.81(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Richard Kuhns is professor emeritus of philosophy at Columbia University. He is the author of a number of works on the philosophical analysis of literature, including Tragedy: Contradiction and Repression; Psychoanalytic Theory of Art; Structures of Experience; and a study of Aeschylus's Oresteia.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction. Storytelling: The Bankruptcy of Reality
1. Trecento Story and Image
2. Aspects of Storytelling: Dreams and Masks
3. Aspects of Storytelling: Reflections on the Metaphoric Power of Metamorphosis
4. Interpretative Method for a Decameron Tale: An Enchanted Pear Tree in Argos
5. The Creation of a Total Work of Art.
6. Storytelling and Truth
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Arthur C. Danto

The deepest work in the philosophy of art is based on an engagement with art itself, rather than with what philosophers have written, who refer to art only as examples. Richard Kuhns's philosophy of the story and story-telling is derived from a close reading of Bocaccio's Decameron, viewed in the light of the literary history it engendered and the visual art it drew on, but also through the sexual psychology for which telling and hearing stories is a metaphor. His book, moreover, has something of the lightness and poetry of its subject, refreshingly free of the heavy burden of theory that has inflected to its detriment so much recent work in literary analysis. It is humanistic scholarship at its best.

Arthur C. Danto, Emeritus Johnsonian Professor of Philosophy, Columbia Univerisity, author of The Philosophical Disenfranchisement of Art

David Carrier

Kuhns has very original, always suggestive things to say about Boccaccio's use of masks; about metamorphosis and irony; and about how such storytelling creates a total work of art. He obviously loves Decameron. In analyzing some of its intricacies, he very effectively communicates his love of Boccaccio's stories to the reader.

David Carrier, Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Institute of Art, author of Writing About Visual Art

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