11165/2003/09082003 U.S
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Singing for Dante in 'Purgatorio'
Bibliotheca Dantesca: Journal of Dante Studies Volume 1 Dante and Music Article 7 2018 SINGING FOR DANTE IN ‘PURGATORIO’ 30–31 Helena Phillips-Robins Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/bibdant Part of the Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque Art and Architecture Commons, Italian Language and Literature Commons, Medieval History Commons, and the Music Commons Recommended Citation Phillips-Robins, Helena (2018) "SINGING FOR DANTE IN ‘PURGATORIO’ 30–31," Bibliotheca Dantesca: Journal of Dante Studies: Vol. 1 , Article 7. Available at: https://repository.upenn.edu/bibdant/vol1/iss1/7 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/bibdant/vol1/iss1/7 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Phillips-Robins: SINGING FOR DANTE Bibliotheca Dantesca, 1 (2018): 127-145 SINGING FOR DANTE IN ‘PURGATORIO’ 30–31 HELENA PHILLIPS-ROBINS, University of Cambridge This essay investigates types of sociality enacted through song, as depicted in Dante’s Earthly Paradise. The first section of the essay argues that the singing of Psalm 30 (In te, Domine, speravi) in Purgatorio 30 is a way of enacting a particular mode of compassion. In the second section of the essay I argue that Dante’s depiction of Psalm 30—together with his depiction of the antiphon sung in Purgatorio 31, the Asperges me—invites a devotional response from the reader. The sociality of prayer can involve not only the characters, but also the readers of the Commedia. I investigate the liturgical context in which Dante and medieval readers would have known and lived the Asperges me. I argue that here, at the end of the narrative of his penitential journey, Dante, with this antiphon, invites the reader to her own performance of penance. -
Combat Trauma in Dante's Inferno Patrick
A Hell of One’s Own: Combat Trauma in Dante’s Inferno Patrick Whalen Must you have battle in your heart forever? —Odyssey 12:132 ante Alighieri was twenty-four years old in 1289 when he saw combat in the Battle of Campaldino as a “feditore”, a cavalry soldier from Florence.1 From what we D know of the battle,2 Dante’s unit would have been one of the first to be engaged by the oncoming Aretine cavalry, and for the first several minutes of the battle, Dante would have faced the prospect of imminent death when he saw the men and horses of his unit dying as their resistance crumbled before the Aretine’s charge. The historian Herbert Oerter notes that the catastrophe of this initial attack actually saved the Florentine forces, and likely Dante with them, because it caused Corso Donati, the flamboyant commander of the Florentine reserves, to disregard his orders and commit to the battle immediately. His orders, on pain of death, were to wait for a signal from one of the senior officers, Guillaume de Durfort. But Guillaume was dying— bleeding out on the plain—and would never give the signal. As it happened, Corso’s reserve position was in defilade to the attacking Aretine’s northern flank. When Corso attacked, his cavalry pierced the unexpecting and unprotected flank of the Aretine force, causing massive chaos and an almost immediate disintegration of the Aretine attack. The battle was over in a few 1 Robert M. Durling and Ronald L. Martinez, Inferno (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), 88. -
Imagery and Symbolism in Dante's Inferno
International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR) ISSN: 2319-7064 Impact Factor (2018): 7.426 Imagery and Symbolism in Dante’s Inferno: An Analysis Dr. Chona M. Adlawan Department of Languages and Communication, College of Arts and Communication, University of Eastern Philippines University Town, Northern Samar Abstract: This research is an analysis of imagery and symbolisms in Dante’s Inferno. Specifically, it looked into the images and symbols present in the first canticle of Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy, the Inferno, thereby excluding the last two books – the Purgatorio (Purgatory) and the Paradiso (Paradise). This qualitative research utilized textual analysis in interpreting the different images and symbols found in the book. The analysis also examined figures of speech and other literary devices. This study is anchored on the mimetic or the classical theory which states that a literary work of art is a re-creation, a re-presentation, and a re-combination of what is found in reality. Dante’s Inferno gives readers an insight of the reality and the nature of sin.Based on the analysis, it was found out that people, beasts, monsters, and places in mythology are found in the Inferno, and used by Dante allegorically in the poem. Dante in the epic was himself a Florentine poet but allegorically, he is the image of a Christian sinner who journeyed through hell, purgatory and finally to paradise where he can find peace and salvation. Virgil, his companion in hell, is the image of Human Wisdom, while Beatrice, the Divine Wisdom. Beatrice also symbolizes the “Blessed Virgin” or one of the “God-bearers”. -
Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy – Inferno
DIVINE COMEDY -INFERNO DANTE ALIGHIERI HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW ENGLISH TRANSLATION AND NOTES PAUL GUSTAVE DORE´ ILLUSTRATIONS JOSEF NYGRIN PDF PREPARATION AND TYPESETTING ENGLISH TRANSLATION AND NOTES Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ILLUSTRATIONS Paul Gustave Dor´e Released under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial Licence. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/ You are free: to share – to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work; to remix – to make derivative works. Under the following conditions: attribution – you must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work); noncommercial – you may not use this work for commercial purposes. Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get permission from the copyright holder. English translation and notes by H. W. Longfellow obtained from http://dante.ilt.columbia.edu/new/comedy/. Scans of illustrations by P. G. Dor´e obtained from http://www.danshort.com/dc/, scanned by Dan Short, used with permission. MIKTEXLATEX typesetting by Josef Nygrin, in Jan & Feb 2008. http://www.paskvil.com/ Some rights reserved c 2008 Josef Nygrin Contents Canto 1 1 Canto 2 9 Canto 3 16 Canto 4 23 Canto 5 30 Canto 6 38 Canto 7 44 Canto 8 51 Canto 9 58 Canto 10 65 Canto 11 71 Canto 12 77 Canto 13 85 Canto 14 93 Canto 15 99 Canto 16 104 Canto 17 110 Canto 18 116 Canto 19 124 Canto 20 131 Canto 21 136 Canto 22 143 Canto 23 150 Canto 24 158 Canto 25 164 Canto 26 171 Canto 27 177 Canto 28 183 Canto 29 192 Canto 30 200 Canto 31 207 Canto 32 215 Canto 33 222 Canto 34 231 Dante Alighieri 239 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 245 Paul Gustave Dor´e 251 Some rights reserved c 2008 Josef Nygrin http://www.paskvil.com/ Inferno Figure 1: Midway upon the journey of our life I found myself within a forest dark.. -
Stasis and Carnal Song: Dante's Medusa and the Siren
Bibliotheca Dantesca: Journal of Dante Studies Volume 1 Dante and Music Article 5 2018 STASIS AND CARNAL SONG: DANTE’S MEDUSA AND THE SIREN Fiorentina Russo Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/bibdant Part of the Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque Art and Architecture Commons, Italian Language and Literature Commons, Medieval History Commons, and the Music Commons Recommended Citation Russo, Fiorentina (2018) "STASIS AND CARNAL SONG: DANTE’S MEDUSA AND THE SIREN," Bibliotheca Dantesca: Journal of Dante Studies: Vol. 1 , Article 5. Available at: https://repository.upenn.edu/bibdant/vol1/iss1/5 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/bibdant/vol1/iss1/5 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Russo: STASIS AND CARNAL SONG Bibliotheca Dantesca, 1 (2018): 96-107 STASIS AND CARNAL SONG: DANTE’S MEDUSA AND THE SIREN FIORENTINA RUSSO, St. John’s University In his epic journey, Dante experiences entrapments, digressions, and ultimately new apertures, leading him forward on his journey to Paradise. The hag-siren of Purgatorio 19 is one of the primary figures, whose song sways the poet in a moment of reverie, embodying a de-mobilizing entrapment most unique and perilous within the poem. While the patristic and medieval traditions have traditionally portrayed the siren as a figure for the deleterious effects of music on the soul, Dante scholarship has glossed the dolce serena as a coordinate for the Medusa of Inferno 9. The siren's association with the Medusa implicitly harkens the reader back to the highly sensual, fugue-like subtext of the rime petrose of an earlier Dantean repertoire. -
"From the Crude Cacophony of Inferno to the Celestial Music of the Spheres
"From the crude cacophony of Inferno to the celestial music of the spheres in Paradise, music abounds in The Divine Comedy." MUSIC AS MIRROR Dante's Treatment of Music in the Divine Comedy KRI STI N A ASTE A TIME OF GREAT MUSICAL DEVELOPMENT, THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY IS THE PERFECT BACKDROP FOR THE AUDITORY ALLUSIONS OF DANTE ALIGHIERl's DIVINE COMEDY. THIS ARTICLE ARGUES THAT DANTE UTILIZES MUSICAL IMAGERY AS AN ESSENTIAL COMPONENT OF HIS ALLEGORY. INFLUENCED BY BOTH CHRISTIAN THINKERS AND PHILOSOPHERS, DANTE LIKELY VIEWED SCHOLASTIC MUSIC AS AN ADJUNCT OF RELIGION. IN THE DIVINE COMEDY, THEREFORE, DANTE PRESENTS AUDITORY ALLUSIONS AS AN INEXTRICABLE FACTOR OF THE PROTAGONIST'S EPIC PI LGRIMAGE THROUGH HELL, PU RG ATORY, AND HEAVEN. THROUGH A PROGRESSION OF ANTI-MUSIC IN INFERNO TO HUMAN CONTEXT IN PURGATORY TO THE MUSIC OF THE SPHERES IN PARADISE, THIS ESSAY EXPLORES HOW THE MUSICAL LANGUAGE OF DANTE'S DIVINE COMEDY CONVEYS HUMANITY'S INNATE CONNECTION WITH GOD. From the crude cacophony of Inferno to the celestial music with the lukewarm in Inferno, the song of Casella in of the spheres in Paradise, music abounds in The Divine Purgatory, and the celestial music of the spheres in Comedy. The text contains one hundred and forty-six refer- Paradise. Each specific passage, especially seen in context ences to music: twenty-nine in Inferno, fifty-nine in of the Comedy's other musical references, illustrates Purgatory, and fifty-seven in Paradise. Rich in hymns and Dante's overall thematic thesis of humanity's relationship liturgical songs, including "Regina Coelis", "Gloria", with God. -
The Divine Comedy
THE DIVINE COMEDY OF DANTE ALIGHIERI TRANSLATED BY HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW I follow here the footing of thy feete That with thy meaning so I may the rather meete S p e n s e r . VOL. I. BOSTON FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO. SUCCESSORS TO TICKNOR AND FIELDS I 869 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW,, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. University Press : W elch, Bigelow, & Co., C a m b r id g e . CONTENTS OF VOL. I. INFERNO. CANTO I. Page The Dark Forest. — The Hill of Difficulty. — The Panther, the Lion, and the Wolf.— Virgil ....................................................................................................1 CANTO II. Dante’s Protest and Virgil’s Appeal. — The Intercession of the Three Ladies B e n e d i g h t .............................................................................................................7 CANTO III. The Gate of Hell. — The Inefficient or Indifferent. — Pope Celestine V. — The Shores of Acheron. — Charon. — The Earthquake and the Swoon . 14 CANTO IV. The First Circle. — Limbo, or the Border Land of the Unbaptized. — The Four Poets, Homer, Horace, Ovid, and Lucan. — The Noble Castle of Philosophy ........................................................................ ........ 2 0 CANTO V. The Second Circle. — Minos. — The Wanton. — The Infernal Hurricane. — Francesca da Rimini— .......................................................................................... 27 CANTO VI. - * V ..' The Third Circle. — Cerberus. — The Gluttonous. — The Eternal Rain. — Ciacco . ............................................................... 34 IV Contents CANTO VII. | The Fourth Circle. — Plutus. — The Avaricious and the Prodigal. — Fortune and her Wheel. — The Fifth Circle. — Styx. — The Irascible and the S u l l e n ......................................................................................... ........ ............... 39 CANTO VIII. Phlegyas. — Philippo Argenti. — The Gate of the City of Dis . -
Allusions in Dante's Infemo
The Review: A Journal of Undergraduate Student Research Volume 5 Article 9 2002 Allusions in Dante's Infemo Sarah Landas St. John Fisher College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://fisherpub.sjfc.edu/ur Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons How has open access to Fisher Digital Publications benefited ou?y Recommended Citation Landas, Sarah. "Allusions in Dante's Infemo." The Review: A Journal of Undergraduate Student Research 5 (2002): 91-112. Web. [date of access]. <https://fisherpub.sjfc.edu/ur/vol5/iss1/9>. This document is posted at https://fisherpub.sjfc.edu/ur/vol5/iss1/9 and is brought to you for free and open access by Fisher Digital Publications at St. John Fisher College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Allusions in Dante's Infemo Abstract In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay's first paragraph. "Vexilla regis produent inferni; the banners of the king go forth, the king of Hell" (Vergani 74). In a place called Dis, the demon Satan resides. He has three hideous heads and spends his time crying from six eyes, while the tears mingle with the blood of three tortured sinners. These sinners, Brutus, Cassius, and Judas Iscariot, are ground to bits by Lucifer's gnashing teeth, while Judas alone receives the benefit of also having his back stripped of its skin as retribution for him being the greatest sinner to be found in all of Hell. This illustration is presented in a graphic and figurative manner, thus making it a prime example of the type of allusion that Dante Alighieri uses throughout the Inferno the first section of his literary classic, The Divine Comedy. -
IDEALISTIC and DISTORTED: DANTE's VISION of the CITY BECOMES ITS OWN TRAVESTY in HELL Jenna Michelle Debs a Thesis Submitted
IDEALISTIC AND DISTORTED: DANTE’S VISION OF THE CITY BECOMES ITS OWN TRAVESTY IN HELL Jenna Michelle Debs A thesis submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Department of Romance Languages (Italian). Chapel Hill 2010 Approved by: Dr. Dino Cervigni Dr. Ennio Rao Dr. Federico Luisetti ©2010 Jenna Michelle Debs ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii Abstract Jenna Michelle Debs Idealistic and Distorted: Dante’s Vision of the City Becomes Its Own Travesty in Hell (Under the direction of Dr. Dino Cervigni) Dante Alighieri’s pride in being a Florentine citizen is clearly demonstrated in his life choices and in his writings. Attempting for years as a public official and then as a writer to influence public opinion, Dante’s eventual exile out of his beloved Florence led to the most powerful work of his career, the writing of the Comedy : Inferno , Purgatorio , and Paradiso . In the Inferno , Dante takes his boldest, explicit steps in representing his own judgments as to what has become of his beloved and ideal city, and what should happen to those in power, and thus responsible for its downfall. Throughout this thesis, various themes of the ideal city, their parodies, and their distortions in the Inferno of La Divina Commedia will be explored. iii Dedication First and foremost, I want to dedicate this thesis to the Lord God and His Son Jesus Christ, for the ever present strength and guidance in my life. To my wonderful parents, Joe and Paulette Debs: thank you for your unconditional love, support, and always believing in me and my dreams. -
Math out of Hell
MATH OUT OF HELL Did Galileo invent modern physics by contemplating the intricate description of hell in Dante's Inferno? Jerusalem That's what Mount Holyoke College professor Mark Peterson argues. Here's how they connect. DANTE’S VISION In Dante’s “Divine Comedy,” the poet narrates a journey through the underworld and heavens. The first book, “The Inferno,” describes hell as a conical abyss descending through the earth in nine concentric terraces. Hell’s Gate The Dark Forest Acheron River 1st Circle: Limbo 2nd Circle: The lustful Minos 3d Circle: Gluttons Cerberus 4th Circle: Hoarders 5th Circle: The wrathful River Styx Sinners receive eternal punishments in the City of Dis nine circles, each level representing a 6th Circle: Heretics gradual increase in wickedness. Minotaur Centaurs River Jerusalem 7th Circle: The violent Phlegethon Harpies Wood of suicides Hell Great barrier and waterfall Detail Geryon 8th Circle: Panderers, seducers flatterers, simoniacs Giants Mount Malebolge Purgatory 9th Circle: The giant pit terminates in a frozen lake, where Lucifer and Satan himself is held in bondage, trapped in the ice. traitors Cocytus GALILEO’S ANALYSIS Dante’s vivid descriptions inspired Renaissance mathematicians to theorize about the topography and geometry of hell. The most popular were two rival attempts by Antonio Manetti and Alessandro Vellutello. A young Galileo Galilei was asked to offer two lectures to the Florentine Academy, analyzing both descriptions. MANETTI’S HELL VELLUTELLO’S HELL Manetti pictured the Vellutello described Inferno as a cone-shaped the pit as a series of region with its vertex at the truncated cones, where the center of the earth and its lower levels have parallel base on the surface, centered walls. -
Inferno Levels Guide
Dante’s Inferno Level Description Dark Wood of Error Dante is confronted by three animals representing the nature of human sin. The Wolf represents the sins of incontinence (urges). The Lion represents the sins of violence and ambition (emotions). The Leopard represents the sins of malice. Vestibule This is the area outside the gateway of Hell. This is where the Opportunists are condemned to live for eternity. They were not good enough to go to Heaven, nor bad enough to go to Hell. They are stuck in-between worlds with the Neutral Angels. These souls are pursued by stinging insects for eternity. I: Limbo Limbo is the first layer of Hell. This layer is reserved for those who were good people, but did not believe in God. Their only punishment is that they will never go to Heaven. Furthermore, Limbo is a pseudo-Heaven, as Paradise is lit up by the light of God, Limbo is illuminated by the Tower of Human Reason. (Notable people: Julius Caesar, Saladin, Socrates, Aristotle) II: Lust This is the second layer of Hell, but the first layer which punishes sin. Those who are punished here indulged in the pleasures of the flesh. As a counter to their sins, their bodies are immaterial, and they cannot touch anything. They are blown about the layer by fierce winds. (Notable people: Antony & Cleopatra, Achilles, Paris, and Tristan) Overseer: Minos III: Gluttony On this layer of Hell, those who over-indulged in food and drink are punished by being submerged into a pit of garbage. IV: Avarice (Greed) On this layer, those who amassed wealth beyond reason are punished by being forced to carry huge rocks, there are two groups of these people. -
Dante's Inferno
Dante's Inferno: Upper Hell With the exception of the Vestibule and Limbo, upper hell is reserved for sins of incontinence--i.e., fleshly sins that originate from unbalanced passions, emotions, and desires. They are few demons here, though Minos does assign sinners to their place in hell when they come to the Vestibule. Most of these sins harmed nobody other than the sinner himself or herself. REGION SINNERS PUNISHMENT Vestibule: (Waiting area) Neutrals, indecisive angels who Stung by insects, endlessly chase would not fight for God or Lucifer. banners Circle I: Limbo Virtuous Pagans, Unbaptized Boredom, not knowing God. Infants Circle II The Lustful Blown forever by storm winds Circle III The Gluttons Discomfort, lying in filth and muck like pigs, senses assaulted Circle IV The Greedy and the Spendthrifts Pushing rocks, useless labor that frustrates others near them for no good end Circle V The Angry and the Sullen The angry thrash about in frustration and fight each other; the sullen sulk under water sighing, blowing bubbles, and refusing all action. Lower Hell: The City of Dis Lower Hell is the City of Dis. In Dante's scheme, Dis is mostly reserved for intellectual sins rather than mere sins of passion. Demons throng here. The suburbs include heretics and violent criminals, and the central rings various frauds. REGION SINNERS PUNISHMENT Circle VI Heretics Trapped in burning tombs Circle VII: Divided into three rings. The Violent (Three types of punishment) Round 1: Violent against acquaintances and strangers. Killers submerged in blood--the more people they have killed, the deeper the blood.