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Jodi Picoult, “The Tenth Circle” (2006)

September 2, 2007 By Professor Arielle Saiber

jodi-picoult-the-tenth-circle-a-novel.jpg“Bestselling author Jodi Picoult’s The Tenth Circle is a metaphorical journey through Dante’s Inferno, told through the eyes of a small Maine family whose hidden demons haunt every aspect of their seemingly peaceful existence.” [. . .]    –Gisele Tuoeg, Amazon

See also: the film “The Tenth Circle” (2008)

Contributed by Charlie Russell-Schlesinger (Bowdoin, ’08)

Categories: Performing Arts, Written Word
Tagged with: 2006, 2008, Circles of Hell, Fiction, Films, Inferno, Maine, Novels, Tenth Circle

Roberto Benigni’s “Tutto Dante”

June 20, 2007 By Professor Arielle Saiber

tutto-dante-roberto-benigni
See Roberto Benigni’s website Tutto Dante for more information and photos.

Contributed by Dorothea Herreiner

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2006, Comedy, Humor, Italy

John Curran, “The Painted Veil” (2006)

June 19, 2007 By Professor Arielle Saiber

john-curran-the-painted-veilThe 2006 movie, The Painted Veil, based on a novel by Somerset Maugham ultimately derives from the author’s fascination with Pia, a character in Dante’s Purgatorio. This discussion of the movie quotes from Maugham’s preface to the novel:

“The idea for the novel began when Maugham was studying Italian under the tuition of the daughter of his landlady in Tuscany before World War I (he had by then decided to abandon a career in medicine for the life of a writer). While working through Dante’s Purgatorio, he came upon this line, spoken by the adulterous wife Pia: Siena mi fe’; disfecemi Maremma. (Siena made me, Maremma unmade me.) Ersilia (for so the tutor was named) explained that Pia was a noblewoman of Siena whose husband, suspecting her of adultery and afraid on account of her family to put her death, took her down to his castle in the Maremma valley, the noxious vapors of which he was confident would kill her off. But she took so long to die that he grew impatient and had her tossed out a window. As Maugham explains in his preface to the novel: ‘I do not know where Ersilia learnt all this. The note in my own Dante was less circumstantial, but the story for some reason caught my imagination. I turned it over in my mind and for many years from time to time would brood over it for two or three days. I used to repeat to myself the line: Siena mi fe’; disfecemi Maremma. But it was one among many subjects that occupied my fancy and for long periods, I forgot it. Of course I saw it as a modern story, but I could not think of a setting in the world of today in which such events might plausibly happen. It was not till I made a long journey in China that I found this.'”    –Edward T. Oakes, First Things, January 10, 2007

Contributed by Patrick Molloy

Categories: Performing Arts
Tagged with: 2006, Films, Italy, Novels, Purgatory

Sandow Birk’s Illustrations of the “Divine Comedy”

January 24, 2007 By Professor Arielle Saiber

sandow-birk-illustrations-to-the-divine-comedy

“A five year project which involved adapting the text of the entire “Divine Comedy” into contemporary slang and setting the action in contemporary urban America. The project resulted in three, limited edition books, Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. Each book contained more than 60 original lithographs and was published by Trillium Press in San Francisco.”    —Sandow Birk

See also: Sandow Birk’s film “Dante’s Inferno” (2007)

Categories: Image Mosaic, Performing Arts, Visual Art & Architecture, Written Word
Tagged with: 2006, 2007, Films, Humor, Illustrated Books, Illustrations, Inferno, Lithographs, Paradiso, Prints, Purgatorio, Translations

Rodney Atkins, “If You’re Going Through Hell” (2006)

January 24, 2007 By Professor Arielle Saiber

rodney-atkins-if-youre-going-through-hell

See Rodney Atkins’ Website.

Contributed by Alex Brasili (Bowdoin, ’10)

Categories: Music
Tagged with: 2006, Country, Hell

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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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