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Dante Alighieri 1265-1321. The Inferno. The Divine Comedy. If you are struggling to find humor in your reading of the Inferno , don’t worry. The whole work is regarded as a comedy in the sense that it ends happily with Dante ascending to Heaven. Terza Rima.
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Dante Alighieri1265-1321 The Inferno
The Divine Comedy • If you are struggling to find humor in your reading of the Inferno, don’t worry. The whole work is regarded as a comedy in the sense that it ends happily with Dante ascending to Heaven.
Terza Rima • Dante introduced this three-line stanza probably to suggest the Holy Trinity • A-B-A, B-C-B, C-D-C, D-E-D etc. • Iambic feet are generally preferred in English • Iambic trimeter u/ u/ u/ • Iambic tetrameter u/ u/ u/ u/ • Iambic pentameter u/ u/ u/ u/ u/
Tuscan • Dante’s use of the common vernacular – the language of the people – is hugely influential in the Tuscan dialect being accepted as a unified Italian language • Chaucer had much the same effect in Britain with his use of Middle English versus French
What the Hell! • The visit to the underworld seems to say that, in the pattern of Christ, ascent first requires descent, a deeper understanding of the possibilities of degradation and of demeaned actuality before consciousness can be converted to conviction.
The hell you say! • The purpose of Hell is to explain the causes of Dante’s inability to ascend the mountain. He must recognize the values responsible for his first missteps. Hell is the place of disaffection, where many false commitments must be unlearned
Three Beasts • The Leopard, Lion, and the She-Wolf all function as allegorical representations of Dante’s sins. He must journey through Hell before he can ascend to Heaven She-Wolf: sins of excessive animal appetite BAD Lion: sins of bestial violence WORSE Leopard: sins of fraud WORST
Apocalyptic Scripture • Dante sees himself as a prophet similar to Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel • The Inferno is a journey of religious faith and salvation and a biting commentary on Italian politics • As you read, consider this: Where in Dante’s Hell do we belong and how would the poet envision us if we were there?
Seven Deadly Sins(In descending order) • Lust • Gluttony • Avarice • Acedia • Wrath • Envy • Pride
Structure in the Inferno • Description of area • Demon threatens/ Virgil protects • Description of sin • Interaction with sinners • Transition to next area • Order can vary, but this comprises most of what happens in each circle
Description of Area • Dante’s descriptions are always vivid. We hear, feel, see, smell, touch the foulness of the place
The Threat of the Demons • Many of the demons that the travelers encounter are half-human, half beast, creatures borrowed from Virgil, who borrowed them from classical Greek sources
Find and Note the Description of the Following Characters in the Inferno • Virgil – Dante’s symbol for HUMAN REASON _ “Glory and light of poets . . . my true master and first author . . . immortal sage.” • Describe who the character is. • Find appropriate passages from the poem to describe the character.
You Find Them • Charon • Minos • Dido • Paulo and Francesca • Cerberus • Minotaur • Centaurs • Harpies • Old Man of Crete
Construct a Map of Hell • Start at the center of Hell where Dante and Virgil climb over Lucifer to appear in the “other hemisphere.’ • Who is there and why? Satan is sealed in ice and beating his wings. He has three faces, and in the mouth of each are Judas Iscariot, Brutus, and Cassius. Each is there for betraying his master
Lucifer • What do you notice about the image of Lucifer? • What is the significance of Lucifer, the arch-demon, weeping? • The image of Lucifer is static and remote. Why does Dante not talk to him?
Read How to Read Dantepp. ix - xvii • Prepare a page of notes/observations for a graded class discussion tomorrow. • I will guide the discussion, but the onus will be on you to make intelligent observations regarding the work • Try to focus on the allegorical meaning of the work. The introductory essay should help you with that