Vernacular Literature
Vernacular literature
is
literature
written in the
vernacular
- the speech of the common people. In the
European
tradition, this effectively means literature not written in
Latin
. In this context, vernacular literature appeared during the
Middle Ages
and it is widely accepted that the earliest European vernacular literature was written in
Irish
. The
Italian
poet
Dante Alighieri
, in his
De vulgari eloquentia
, was possibly the first European writer to argue cogently for the promotion of literature in the vernacular. Important early vernacular works include Dante's
Divine Comedy
,
Giovanni Boccaccio
's
Decameron
(both written in
Italian
) and
Geoffrey Chaucer
's
Canterbury Tales
(written in
English
). By extension, the term is also used to describe, for example,
Chinese literature
not written in classical Chinese and
Indian
literature after
Sanskrit
.
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