The Image of Francesca Da Rimini in Nineteenth-Century Opera. An Analysis of the Dantesque Character in the Libretto Written by Paolo Pola
Authors
İtalyan Dostlukve Kültür Derneği, Izmir, Türkiye (Türkiye)
Article Information
DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.100300481
Subject Category: Literature
Volume/Issue: 10/3 | Page No: 6661-6669
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2026-03-25
Accepted: 2026-04-01
Published: 2026-04-14
Abstract
This essay examines the figure of Francesca da Rimini as she appears in nineteenth-century Italian opera, focusing on the libretto written by Cavalier Paolo Pola in 1829 for the Teatro La Fenice in Venice. Rather than tracing the character back exclusively to Dante's Inferno, the analysis argues that the Francesca staged by Pola and his contemporaries is a fundamentally new creation - shaped by Jacobin ideology, Romantic sensibility, and Risorgimento politics. Through close reading of selected passages from the libretto, the essay explores two competing interpretations of the character: a moral absolution, which presents her as a victim of circumstance faithful to duty despite the pull of love, and a revolutionary condemnation, which reads her passivity as an allegory for an Italy unable to rise against foreign domination. The essay also traces the onomastic shift from Francesca da Polenta to Francesca da Rimini, arguing that this renaming reflects a broader cultural appropriation of the character by patriotic authors. The conclusion situates Francesca within the wider context of proto-feminist discourse and the Risorgimento canon, proposing that her enduring relevance lies in her capacity to be reinterpreted by every generation
Keywords
Francesca da Rimini, Italian opera
Downloads
References
1. Alighieri, Dante (2021). Inferno. Giulio Einaudi Editore. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
2. Boccaccio, Giovanni (1863). Il Comento. Vol. II. Felice Le Monnier. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
3. Della Peruta, Franco (2000). L’Ottocento. Dalla Restaurazione alla “belle époque”. Le Monnier. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
4. Farina, Ferruccio (2013). Desiderio di libertà. Francesca da Rimini tra poesia e teatro nel primo Risorgimento. Rivista di Filologia e letterature ispaniche, no. XVI. Edizioni ETS. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
5. Farina, Ferruccio (2021). Francesca Da Rimini. Storia di un mito. Letteratura, teatro, arti visive e musica tra XIV e XXI secolo. Vallecchi. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
6. Farina, Ferruccio (2005). Una Francesca ritrovata. Francesca da Rimini in una sconosciuta composizione poetica del 1795. Romagna Arte e Storia. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
7. Matteini, Nevio (1965). Francesca da Rimini: storia, mito, arte. Cappelli. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
8. Nuvoli, Giuliana (2009). Vorrei raccontarti una storia: Paolo e Francesca fra testo e rappresentazione artistica dal Trecento all’età romantica, in Italianistica, vol. XXXVIII, fasc. 2. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
9. Pellico, Silvio (1859). Tragedie. Le Monnier. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
10. Pola, Paolo (1829). Francesca di Rimini. Dramma per musica. Tipografia Casali. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
Metrics
Views & Downloads
Similar Articles
- Culture: The (In) Human Engagement with Nature
- Identity Crisis in Orhan Pamuk’s The Black Book: A Critical Interpretation
- Metaphor in Pop-Up Swahili Sayings: Is it a New Meaning or a New Idea?
- Racial Identity and Ecological Belonging in Toni Morrison’s Beloved: A Study through Social Identity Theory and Eco-Race Theory
- The Role of Non-Human Agency in Contemporary Literature: A Posthumanist Analysis