: His Canzoniere is a masterclass in the "failing search for self-possession" caused by obsessive love, depicting it as a "fatal multiplicity" that obstructs the mind.
: It was classified as a form of melancholy . Symptoms included a pale complexion, insomnia, loss of appetite (leading to emaciation), and a "disturbed pulse rate" that spiked when the beloved's name was mentioned. Malattia d'amore
: In the Divine Comedy , Dante explores the "pathological gaze"—an erotic obsession where the eyes of the body and mind become fixated on an object of desire, such as the dream of the Siren in Purgatorio . Modern Cultural Echoes : His Canzoniere is a masterclass in the
: Director Paul Morrissey’s 1988 film Spike of Bensonhurst prominently features music from the album "Malattia d'amore" by the Italian singer Pupo . The film uses these "honeyed strains" of Italian pop to underscore the messy, often transactional nature of modern romance in Italian-American enclaves. : In the Divine Comedy , Dante explores
Italian authors have long used malattia d'amore as a central theme to explore human vulnerability and social structures.
Today, "Malattia d'amore" survives more as a cultural and artistic trope than a medical diagnosis.