dante alighieri (1265-1321)
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Dante Alighieri (1265-1321). Dante born in Florence—more like an independent Greek city-state than a city Florence entering into its period of greatness at the time of his childhood A republic—ruled by a large group—rather than a democracy. His life as related to the Comedy. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) Dante born in Florence—
more like an independent Greek city-state than a city
Florence entering into its period of greatness at the time of his childhood
A republic—ruled by a large group—rather than a democracy
His life as related to the Comedy Little known of his life Though born in modest
circumstances, he never had to seek gainful employment
Could devote his life to study and literature
Met Beatrice, love and muse of his life, when he was 9 and she was 8
Vita Nuova From moment they met, he was
overcome by love for her Had a vision, wrote “To every
captive soul and gentle heart” in response to that vision
She was the unattainable; both married another
Beatrice died in 1290; Dante inconsolable, but was finally able to set down the story of his love in Vita Nuova
Describes his spiritual regeneration through his pure love for Beatrice
The (Divine) Comedy Resolved to write of Beatrice
what has never been written about any woman
Carried this out in his Comedy—later became known as the Divine Comedy
Not comedy in the usual sense, but in the sense that it begins in despair and ends in bliss
A long narrative poem written in terza rima—an epic, but more of a spiritual epic, written rather than spoken (true also of the Aeneid)
Structure of The Comedy Three books or canticles Each canticle is divided
into 33 cantos Verse schema is terza
rima—stanzas of three lines with interlocking rhymes
Multiples of the number three abound within the work
Characters and Themes Works both as a literal
story and an allegory Dante himself is a
character—a sort of Everyman—on quest for redemption-salvation
Begins mid-journey in a sort of mid-life crisis “alone in a dark wood” having lost the straight path
Virgil as Mentor-Guide Dante meets the shade of
Virgil—great Roman poet and author of The Aeneid—who represents Human Reason
Virgil leads Dante through descent into hell (parallel to epic protagonist’s journey into the underworld)
Hell shaped like a cone, lesser sins at the wide top and gravest sins at narrow bottom where Satan lives
Purgatory After descending to
the depths of hell, Dante must climb the mountain of purgatory (Canticle Two)
Here sinners are purging themselves for entrance into paradise or heaven
Paradise In the third book,
Beatrice comes to escort Dante into Paradise, where he is assured of his salvation
Dante experiences a final rapture as he gazes directly at God, the source of all Love