Adventurer The life and times of Giacomo Casanova

Leopold Damrosch

Book - 2022

The iconic libertine Giacomo Casanova (1725-1798) was a storied adventurer through the Enlightenment's shadowy underside. Known as a serial seducer, he was also an aspiring priest, an army officer, a fortune teller, a con man, a violinist, a mathematician, a Masonic master, an entrepreneur, a diplomat, a gambler, and a spy. The first to tell his own story, in his massive autobiography Histoire de Ma Vie, he recorded at least a hundred and twenty love affairs, as well as dramatic sagas of duels, swindles, arrests, and escapes. He knew kings and an empress, Catherine the Great, and most of the famous writers of the time, including Voltaire and Benjamin Franklin. Drawing on seldom used materials, Leo Damrosch situates Casanova fully in th...e multiple subcultures he inhabited. Reading Casanova's memoir with a critical eye and engaging extensively with his non-autobiographical writings, he brings alive this extraordinary figure and the eighteenth-century world that Casanova knew so intimately. Casanova aspired to a life of freedom from restraints, but, Damrosch asks, freedom at whose expense?

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New Haven ; London : Yale University Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Leopold Damrosch (author)
Physical Description
vii, 422 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), map ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 379-406) and index.
ISBN
9780300248289
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: The Challenge of Casanova
  • 1. City of Masks and Mirrors
  • 2. Awakenings
  • 3. An Erotic Education
  • 4. A Career in the Church
  • 5. The Mysterious Castrato
  • 6. Casanova's Children
  • 7. Corfu and Constantinople
  • 8. Metamorphosis
  • 9. Playboy
  • 10. Libertinism
  • 11. "You Will Also Forget Henriette,"
  • 12. Paris at Last
  • 13. Nuns and Lovers
  • 14. The Great Escape
  • 15. In Search of the Blind Goddess
  • 16. Manon
  • 17. Rolling Stone
  • 18. Jousting with Voltaire
  • 19. Still Rolling
  • 20. Magus
  • 21. The End of Act I
  • 22. At the Courts of Frederick and Catherine
  • 23. The Duel
  • 24. "This Phantom Liberty,"
  • 25. Spain
  • 26. Whiling Away the Years in Italy
  • 27. Trieste, and Venice at Last
  • 28. The Gathering Gloom
  • 29. A Pink Louis XV Armchair
  • Chronology
  • Short Titles
  • Notes
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Harvard literature professor Damrosch (The Club) takes an evenhanded look at 18th-century Italian libertine Giacomo Casanova in this scrupulous biography. Drawing largely from Casanova's embellished autobiography, Histoire de Ma Vie, Damrosch corrects the record when historical documentation proves that the unreliable narrator offered confused timelines or impossible events. He details Casanova's relentless pursuit of pleasure, including gambling for income and the "thrills of risk-taking," as well as spending fortunes on fine clothing, women, and alcohol, but also alleges that his subject was a con man who used magic and mathematical tricks to part wealthy marks from their money. Most disturbingly, Damrosch contends that Casanova (and others of his era) targeted prepubescent and young teenage girls for sexual conquests, often with the complicity of their mothers. Though he largely avoids gratuitousness in recounting Casanova's sexual exploits, Damrosch's claim that Casanova wasn't interested in homoerotic experiences isn't entirely convincing. Even if Damrosch succeeds in picking apart the mythology that has cast Casanova as a charming seducer rather than a predator, his enigmatic subject remains somewhat elusive. Still, this is an eye-opening and well-informed study of an "extraordinary character" in all his darkness and brilliance. (May)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A vivid chronicle of the passions of an 18th-century libertine. Giacomo Casanova (1725-1798) has been the subject of many biographies, based largely on edited and sometimes sanitized versions of his Histoire de ma vie, in which he recounted more than 100 sexual conquests, relentless travels, and a lifetime spent perpetrating scams and cons. Damrosch, an award-winning biographer of Jonathan Swift, William Blake, and others, offers a close critical study of the original manuscript and of supplementary texts that include hundreds of pages of unpublished works. The result is a nuanced, deftly contextualized biography of an adventurer, an opportunist, and a man of voracious appetites who was determined to free himself from all manner of repression. He was, Damrosch writes, not "just a bad boy, he was a particular kind of bad boy" whose sexual encounters were "opportunistic and [sometimes] disturbingly exploitative." He engaged in pedophilia (though, as Damrosch explains, the age of consent at the time was 10), incest, and gang rape; claimed to have occult powers; and lost fortunes gambling. Born to actors in Venice, Casanova imbibed the spirit of the swarming, culturally diverse city. The major industry, Damrosch writes, "was pleasure," and Casanova, drawn to role-playing, fascinated by cross-dressing, and an "instinctive improvisor," thrived there. Damrosch hews closely to the narrative of the Histoire, testing Casanova's version--and the analyses of previous biographers--against available historical evidence. Still, his portrait is not a corrective to what is already well known but rather an amplification. Although he states at the outset that "the story of a notorious seducer needs to be addressed frankly and critically," Damrosch ably demonstrates his subject's energy and intelligence, "the joie de vivre, the enormous risks and hair-raising escapes, the lifelong struggle to invent and reinvent himself," as well as his impressive talent in creating a memoir "bursting with vitality"--an apt description for this beautifully illustrated biography. An authoritative, richly detailed portrait of a fascinating historical character and yet another top-notch work from Damrosch. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.