Catalan literature

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Catalan literature, the body of literature written in the Catalan language, a Romance language spoken primarily in the Spanish autonomous regions of Catalonia, Valencia, and the Balearic Islands.

Medieval period

Poetry

Catalan literature has its roots in the Occitan language and the poetic forms cultivated by the troubadours, who dominated the courts of southern France, northern Spain, and northern Italy from the 11th through the 13th century. The early Catalan troubadours Guillem de Bergadà, Hug de Mataplana, and Guillem de Cervera were genuine Provençal poets. In the 14th century the influence of the troubadours began to lessen, and Catalan poets turned to northern France for inspiration. They took over the long French narratives based on romance themes, such as the Arthurian cycle, and wrote in octosyllabic rhymed couplets (called noves rimades [“rhymed news”]).

In 1393 King John I of Aragon created a poetic academy in Barcelona where he inaugurated a series of poetry competitions called jocs florals (“floral games”). Prizes named after flowers were awarded yearly to poems by a kind of learned society called the Consistori del Gai Saber (“Consistory of the Gay Science”; see also gai saber), the main aim of which was the preservation of the language and style of troubadour poetry. This groundwork would make the 15th century the great period of Catalan poetry. After John’s death, in 1395, his successors Martin I and Ferdinand I continued to encourage poetry and helped to emancipate Catalan literary style from foreign influences. As the 15th century advanced, Valencia emerged as a new centre of literary activity.

The influence of the cants d’amor (“songs of love”) and cants de mort (“songs of death”) of Ausias March, considered by some the finest poems ever written in Catalan, extended to 16th-century Castile and beyond. Jaume Roig’s Spill o llibre de les dones (c. 1460; “The Mirror or Book of Women”), a caustic satire of more than 16,000 lines, offers a vivid portrait of contemporary Valencian life. Another Valencian writer, Joan Roiç de Corella, is perhaps the best representative of the Renaissance.

After the union of Aragon with Castile in 1479, which unified Spain and ended Catalonia’s independence, the Castilian dialect of the Spanish language predominated throughout Spain, spelling a long eclipse of Catalan literature. Juan Boscán was emblematic of the status of Catalan literature during this period: Catalan by birth—he was born in Barcelona—he wrote solely in Castilian and inaugurated a new school of poetry in that dialect. By the time his works were published in 1543, a year after his death, Catalan poetry had been all but dormant for 50 years.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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Famous Poets and Poetic Form

Prose

Literary prose emerged with the Homilies d’Organyà (12th- or 13th-century homilies found in the parish of Organyà in the county of Urgell) but did not flourish until the end of the 13th century. Four great chronicles, together with the works of Ramon Llull, represent the peak of medieval Catalan prose. The anonymous chronicle Llibre dels feyts del rey en Jacme (“Book of the Deeds of King James”), compiled after James I’s death in 1276 but purportedly autobiographical, is distinguished by its skill of narration and its quality of language. The same qualities are present in Ramon Muntaner’s chronicle, which combines accounts of the Grand Catalan Company’s expedition to the Morea in southern Greece, of the failed French invasion of Catalonia, and of King James II’s conquest of Sardinia. Bernat Desclot’s chronicle deals with the reign of King Peter III; King Peter IV planned and revised the last of the four great chronicles.

Llull’s encyclopaedic works, written in Catalan, Arabic, and Latin, cover every branch of medieval knowledge. His exhaustive theological treatise Llibre de contemplació en Déu (c. 1272; “Book of the Contemplation of God”) begins the golden age of Catalan literature; it also provides a wealth of information on 13th-century Catalan society. His Llibre d’Evast e Blanquerna (c. 1284; “Book of Evast and Blanquerna”) is the founding text of Catalan fiction. Known as Blanquerna, it is the narrative of the lives of Blanquerna and his parents, Evast and Aloma, whose marriage comes to represent an ideal Christian marriage; successive chapters tell of stages in the life of Blanquerna, who ascends from altar boy to the papacy but then abandons his throne to enter monastic life. The narrative aims at representing all aspects of Christian existence. It includes the Llibre d’amic e amat (The Book of the Lover and the Beloved), a masterpiece of Christian mysticism. Llull’s Llibre de l’orde de cavalleria (between 1275 and 1281; The Book of the Order of Chivalry) and Félix (c. 1288) are didactic works in a narrative framework.

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Bernat Metge translated Giovanni Boccaccio’s story of Griselda from Petrarch’s Latin version and, clothing his scholastic learning with poetic imagination, achieved the stylistic masterpiece of early Catalan prose. Metge also wrote Lo somni (c. 1409; The Dream of Bernat Metge) in the tradition of medieval fantasy literature; the narrator converses with mythological characters and with the dead John I, who, from purgatory, exculpates Metge. The chivalric romance Tirant lo Blanc (c. 1460; Eng. trans. Tirant lo Blanc) by Joanot Martorell and Martí Joan de Galba offers a fictional treatment of Catalan exploits in the Middle East. The anonymous Curial e Güelfa (late 14th century; Eng. trans. Curial and Guelfa) draws on Desclot, the only other Catalan romance to do so.

The beginnings of Catalan drama were represented by a 15th-century mystery play, Misteri d’Elx (“Mystery of Elx”), which through the turn of the 21st century was performed annually in Spain at Elche (Elx), near Valencia, on the Feast of the Assumption.