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Ludovico AriostoA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The structure that Ariosto uses in Orlando Furioso—interlacing narratives—is found throughout the chivalric romance genre. The device consists of embedded and multilayered narrative frames: first, that of the narrator and his audience; next, the stories of the main characters, including Orlando, Astolfo, Ruggiero, and Bradamant, which interrupt and overlap with each other; and finally, the stories of the people the main questing knights encounter.
In the first framing layer, the narrator explains his intended audience and where he gets his material. In the introduction of most cantos, the narrator addresses various audience members, including “my Lord” (106) and “Ladies” (339). At various times, the narrator also mentions his sources: “Federigo Fregoso” (499), “Turpin” (131, 214, 340, 406, 534, etc.), as well as an “author” whose “name does not matter” (287). The narrator asserts that the overlapping and interrupted nature of the stories comes from this source material: for instance, Turpin “makes a digression at this point and returns to the place where Pinabello of Maganza was slain” (271).
In the second layer, the narrator frequently switches between his main characters, almost always teasing a moment of action or a cliff hanger before moving to a different character.
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