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Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

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Paterson (2016 film)

June 6, 2023 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

“Paterson (dir. Jim Jarmusch, 2016) is an Amazon Prime original film about a bus driver named Paterson (Adam Driver) who writes poetry in his free times and on his breaks from work, though his only audience for them is his wife Laura (Golshifteh Farahani). The movie follows the bus driver/poet on a weeklong journey of everyday experiences, watching him observe the sights, sounds, and people of the town of Paterson, New Jersey. During the first day, the film shows Paterson sitting down to eat his lunch which was packed by his wife, and shows that she had put a Dante Alighieri postcard in it, which he looks at and acknowledges verbally before eating his lunch and writing his own poetry.”   –Contributor Robert Alex Lee

Contributed by Robert Alex Lee (Florida State University, MA 2024)

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: Films, Journeys, Love, Movies, New Jersey, Poetry, United States

The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones (2013)

March 17, 2023 By Cory Balon

jace-wayland

 

“My will and my desire were turned by love, the love that moves the sun and the other stars.”    –Jace Wayland, City of Bones (2013)

You can watch Mortal Instruments: City of Bones on Netflix, Hulu, Vudu, and Amazon Prime.

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2013, Adaptations, Films, Love that Moves the Sun and Other Stars, Young Adults

The Lost Daughter, Film by Maggie Gyllenhaal (2021)

February 1, 2023 By Gabriella Mola (FSU)

promotional-poster-for-the-lost-daughter-featuring-olivia-coleman-sitting-on-a-beach“The Lost Daughter by Maggie Gyllenhaal is a 2021 film adaptation of the 2006 Elena Ferrante novel of the same name. The novel’s protagonist, Leda, is an Italian woman who works as an English Literature professor. Since the film is in English, Gyllenhaal decides to make some setting changes, and Leda becomes a professor working on Italian Literature instead in the film. For this reason, in a scene from the movie, we can see Leda working on some texts, among which is Dante’s Comedy. The frame shows the books just for a few seconds, but it is clear that one of them is open on the first Canto of Paradiso. Even if shown just for a few seconds, the specific text in Leda’s book is significant in connection to the whole movie. The insertion of Dante in the film is both the consequence of the adaptation of the book in a foreign setting and an homage from the director to Ferrante and the whole Italian literary tradition.”    –Contributor Martina Franzini

Contributed by Martina Franzini, Johns Hopkins University

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2021, Academia, Films, Italy, Literature, Paradiso, The Canon

Lindsay Lohan’s Falling For Christmas(2022)

December 6, 2022 By Cory Balon

lindsay-lohanIn an essay for Vulture Rachel Handler compares Lindsay Lohan’s new Netflix movie, Falling for Christmas, to Dante’s Divine Comedy: “She must travel through each circle of hell, including Heresy, where she eats bacon despite saying she ‘doesn’t do bacon,’ and Treachery, wherein she learns that her fiancé was gay all along and using her for clout.”    –Rachel Handler, “Netflix’s Falling for Christmas Is a Dante’s Inferno-esque Allegory,” Vulture (November 10, 2022)

Read the article here.

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2022, Christmas, Films, Heresy, Netflix, Nine circles, Treachery, Virgil

Dante in film and television, Program from the Italian Cultural Institute of Oslo (2021)

December 1, 2022 By Sebastian Spadavecchio

dante-700-nel-mondo“The dialogue between the work of Dante and film will be the theme of Professor Helge Rønning‘s conference, organized by the Italian Cultural Institute of Oslo and streaming live on the Institute’ s Facebook page.

“This happy conjunction is taking place in the year of the celebrations for the 700th anniversary of the poet’s death and in the week of the 2021 edition of Fare Cinema, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation’s festival dedicated to promoting Italian film and its trades. The possibilities arising from the encounter between Dante – in particular the Divine Comedy and the Inferno – and film (and later television) have long fascinated filmmakers, ever since the days of silent films.”    –“Dante in film and television,” Italiana, July 15, 2021 (link expired, but see the Wayback Machine’s archived version here)

 

Categories: Digital Media, Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2021, 700th anniversary, Cinema, Film, Inferno, Media, Movies, Norway, Oslo, Silent Films, Television

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All submissions will be considered for posting. Bibliographic references and scholarly essays are also welcome for consideration.

How to Cite

Coggeshall, Elizabeth, and Arielle Saiber, eds. Dante Today: Citings and Sightings of Dante’s Works in Contemporary Culture. Website. Access date.

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