The Decameron
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Beschrijving
Composed as a frame narrative of one hundred tales told over ten days by ten young Florentines fleeing the Black Death, The Decameron transforms catastrophe into an art of social observation. Its prose is supple, ironic, and vividly theatrical, ranging from bawdy farce to moral exemplum, mercantile realism, romance, and tragic pathos. Standing between medieval didacticism and Renaissance humanism, it gives worldly intelligence, wit, and narrative pleasure a new literary dignity. Giovanni Boccaccio, born in 1313 and shaped by the commercial culture of Florence and Naples, brought to the work both urban sophistication and an unusually capacious sympathy for human desire. His knowledge of courtly literature, classical models, popular storytelling, and the practical ethics of merchants informs the book's extraordinary variety. The plague of 1348, which devastated Florence, supplied not merely a setting but a profound occasion for reflecting on fortune, mortality, social order, and resilience. Readers should approach The Decameron as one of European literature's foundational works: entertaining, provocative, and intellectually restless. It rewards those interested in narrative art, medieval society, gender, comedy, and the emergence of modern secular imagination.