Introduction: “Finding the Renaissance Boccaccio” by Martin Eisner and David Lummus
Part 1. Boccaccio and Renaissance Humanism
1. “Boccaccio and the Political Thought of Renaissance Humanism” by James Hankins
2. “Boccaccio’s Humanist Brigata: Reading the Decameron in the Quattrocento” by Timothy Kircher
Part 2. Framing the Renaissance Boccaccio
3. “Poets Prefer Company: Boccaccio’s Portraits and the Three Crowns of Florence” by Victoria Kirkham
4. “Under the Cover of a Green-Hued Book: Boccaccio’s Pastoral Project” by Jonathan Combs-Schilling
5. “Squarzafico’s Vita di Boccaccio and Early Modern Print Culture: A New Model for the Study of Biography” by Rhiannon Daniels
6. “Vernacularizing the Latin Boccaccio In Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Italy: Notes on Niccolò Liburnio’s Delli Monti, Selve, Boschi and Giuseppe Betussi’s Genealogia De Gli Dei” by Simon Gilson
Part 3. Boccaccio in Renaissance Italy
7. “Along the Path of Disaster: The Decameron and Bembo's Prose” by Michael Sherberg
8. “‘For instruction and benefit’: The Renaissance Boccaccio as Model of Language and Life” by Brian Richardson
9. “De nuptiis comoediae et novellae: Italian Comedy Receives Boccaccio’s Decameron (1486-1533)” by Ronald L. Martinez
Part 4. Boccaccio in Renaissance Europe
10. “Language, Nation, Translation: When Boccaccio’s Unnatural Prose Becomes ‘le commun langaige Francoys’” by Marc Schachter
11. “Boccaccio in the Spanish Renaissance: Juan de Flores’s Grimalte y Gradisa” by Ignacio Navarrete
12. “Regendering Griselda on the London Stage” by Janet Levarie Smarr