One of Fonte's first known works is a musical play performed before the
Doge Da Ponte in 1581 at the festival of St. Stephen's Day.
Le Feste [
The Feasts] includes about 350 verses with several singing parts. Also in 1581, she published her epic poem
I tredici canti del Floridoro [
The Thirteen Cantos of Floridoro] dedicated to
Bianca Cappello and her new husband,
Francesco I de' Medici, the Grand Duke of Tuscany. This poem is the second chivalric work published by an Italian woman, after
Tullia d’Aragona's Il Meschino, which appeared in 1560. Fonte wrote two religious poems,
La Passione di Cristo [''Christ's Passion
] and La Resurrezione di Gesù Cristo nostro Signore che segue alla Santissima Passione in otava rima da Moderata Fonte
[The Resurrection of Jesus Christ, our Lord, which follows the Holy Passion in octaves by Moderata Fonte'']. In these works she describes in detail the emotional reactions of the Virgin Mary and Mary Magdalen to
Christ's death and resurrection, illustrating her deep belief in the active participation of women in the events of the Passion and Resurrection of Christ. She is perhaps best known for a composition that she worked on from the years 1588 to 1592 called
Il Merito delle donne [On The Merit of Women], published posthumously in 1600, in which she criticizes the treatment of women by men while celebrating women's virtues and intelligence and arguing that
women are superior to men, Her husband placed a marble epitaph on her tomb which describes Pozzo as ‘femina doctissima’ [a very learned woman].
Giustizia delle donne (The Worth of Women: Wherein is Clearly Revealed Their Nobility and Their Superiority to Men) Giustizia delle donne was published after Fonte's death along with
Il merito delle donne. Both literary works are influenced by Boccaccio's
Decameron: they are frame stories where the characters develop their dialogues and
exempla. A group of women are talking in a Venetian garden when Pasquale arrives and breaks the relaxed atmosphere by referring to the last argument she has had with her husband. It leads to an inspiring conversation about "masculine behaviour" in which they complain about the unfair situations they have to face every day; they imagine twelve punishments (one per month) in order to raise awareness among men of the female plight. The punishments would require men to suffer public humiliation, become self-sacrificing parents, and live isolated from their friends and family. The most remarkable punishment is the one dedicated to silence: only women would have a voice, and that voice would allow them to finally speak and organize society. Fonte frequently used irony, paradox, and address to the reader. She was influenced by the rhythm of
Plato's dialogues. The book is divided in 14 chapters: the first one works as an introduction or frame, the next twelve cover punishments and attacks to the masculine figure and in the last one they return to real life after their imaginary trip wiser and filled with hope. == Themes and outcomes ==