It didn't start out well:
Roger e un ragazzo americano. Maria e una ragazza italiana. Roger e Maria sono amici. . .
Roger is an American boy visiting Italy. He goes to a cafĂ© and tries to pick up a local girl. In the first lesson we learned “What is your name?”, "Your country is beautiful," and "How old are you."
Roger learns the time so he won’t be late for the cinema, learns the names of food so he can order in the restaurant, gets an overview of national history as they tour the museums. In Chapter 10, we learn the Italian word for "kiss" (bacio).
Why do even language-learning dialogues have to be about boys and girls gazing at each other?
But one weekend I drove two hours into Houston, to the Wilde-and-Stein Bookstore, and bought Ganymede in the Renaissance, about how Renaissance artists used the myth of Ganymede, a mortal boy swept up by Zeus to become his catamite.
And I discovered a whole gay world in Renaissance Italy, artists, writers, statesmen.
1. Leonardo Da Vinci. He gets a girlfriend in modern straightwashing biopics, but he was gay.
2. Michelangelo. He gets straightwashed a lot, too.
3. Donatello, who sculpted the famously effeminate David, a counterpart to Michelangelo's more macho version.
4. Benvenuto Cellini. His Autobiography was on the list of recommended readings in my class in Renaissance History in college. I didn't read it, and the professor never said a word.
5. Caravaggio, played by Dexter Fletcher and Nigel Terry in the 1986 movie.
6. Aretino, who wrote Il Marescalco, about a gay man forced to marry a woman, but fortunately she turns out to be a man.
7. Ariosto. I bought his Orlando Furioso in a Ballantine Adult Fantasy edition, but it was about winning The Girl.
8. Matteo Bandello, who wrote 12 Novelle, one about a gay man.
9. The painter Giovanni Antonio Bazzi, nicknamed "Il Sodoma"
See also: "Da Vinci's Demons": An absurdly heterosexual Da Vinci, a bi guy who only likes ladies, two monstrous gay predators
Pasolini's "Arabian Nights": The less well-known tales told with pe* nises and homophobia
"Caravaggio's Shadow": As time goes by, the gay Baroque painter becomes more and more straight. With n*de Italian men





Some readings of Inferno assume Dante's teacher molested him. Obviously that doesn't make Dante gay, but it makes the seventh circle (otherwise a homophobic game of One Of These Things Is Not Like The Others) more understandable.
ReplyDeleteA lot of scholars try to redeem Dante by pointing out that he honors his old teacher.
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