Studies on religious history have focused on the relationship between vernacular imprints circulation and the spread of heterodoxy. In many anthologies of vernacular letters, printed in Venice between 1542 and 1555, we find high concentration of authors who were at that time under investigation by the Inquisition, since they were suspected to have to do with heterodox doctrines, i.e. Bernardino Ochino, Marcantonio Flaminio, Pietro Carnesecchi, Pier Paolo Vergerio. The research on the many editions of a single anthology leads to reflect on the different uses that publishers and editors had conceived for their books over such a brief period. Among those, epistolary anthologies were only one of the strategies aiming at legitimating irenic doctrines and requests of a reform within the Roman Church straight before the Council of Trent. In the following decades, as a consequence of intransigent positions prevailing and of the Inquisition’s power getting less and less contested, epistolary anthologies were deeply transformed: the letters by authors on the Index or investigated by Inquisition were expunged or clipped, furthermore, some editions were listed on the Index waiting for bowdlerisation.

Libri pericolosi : censura, autocensura ed espurgazione dei testi epistolari nel Cinquecento / L. Braida. - In: SCHIFANOIA. - ISSN 2038-6591. - 44-45:(2013), pp. 33-45. ((Intervento presentato al 15. convegno Censura e letteratura tenutosi a Ferrara nel 2012.

Libri pericolosi : censura, autocensura ed espurgazione dei testi epistolari nel Cinquecento

L. Braida
Primo
2013

Abstract

Studies on religious history have focused on the relationship between vernacular imprints circulation and the spread of heterodoxy. In many anthologies of vernacular letters, printed in Venice between 1542 and 1555, we find high concentration of authors who were at that time under investigation by the Inquisition, since they were suspected to have to do with heterodox doctrines, i.e. Bernardino Ochino, Marcantonio Flaminio, Pietro Carnesecchi, Pier Paolo Vergerio. The research on the many editions of a single anthology leads to reflect on the different uses that publishers and editors had conceived for their books over such a brief period. Among those, epistolary anthologies were only one of the strategies aiming at legitimating irenic doctrines and requests of a reform within the Roman Church straight before the Council of Trent. In the following decades, as a consequence of intransigent positions prevailing and of the Inquisition’s power getting less and less contested, epistolary anthologies were deeply transformed: the letters by authors on the Index or investigated by Inquisition were expunged or clipped, furthermore, some editions were listed on the Index waiting for bowdlerisation.
Raccolte epistolari; censura; Inquisizione; eterodossia
Settore M-STO/02 - Storia Moderna
Settore M-STO/08 - Archivistica, Bibliografia e Biblioteconomia
2013
Istituto di Studi Rinascimentali di Ferrara
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/290371
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