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Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

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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

Kimiya Memarzadeh, “Academia’s Inferno” (April 4, 2016)

May 5, 2022 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

person-behind-books“In high school I read a book called Inferno by Dante Alighieri. [. . .] I want to take you through the nine circles of suffering every graduate student experiences on their journey to defending their thesis. I’m sure there are far more than nine forms of struggle that graduate students go through, but for the purpose of the analogy, we will stick with nine.

[. . .]

“Defeat is another circle that graduate students become quite familiar with. It happens so often that around the two-year mark of grad school, most of us seem to get desensitized to it. We learn to separate our self-worth from the worth of our work, and to focus on doing the best we can without letting defeat get in the way of our confidence. We build a thicker skin, and if nothing else, this circle of suffering will prepare us for a lifetime of rejected grants and harsh criticism from pesky ‘Reviewer Three.’

“This brings us to the last and probably most dangerous circle – doubt. Part of being a scientist is being a skeptic. However, if you constantly doubt yourself, your progress, or your ideas, you will inevitably make your graduate school experience a painful one. Go confidently in the direction you pursue, and if you fail – well then you’re just back at circle one.” –Kimiya Memarzadeh, “Academia’s Inferno,” McGovern Medical School (April 4, 2016)

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2016, Academia, America, American Universities, Blogposts, Circles of Hell, Graduate School, Science, Student Life, Students, Universities

Sante Matteo, “Escape from Paradise,” Twelve Writers

January 9, 2022 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

“Before Beatrice fled from Florence to Venice and beyond in my story, she migrated from the classroom to the written page, then set sail and found a welcome dock at Twelve Winters Journal.

“A course I taught on the Divine Comedy drew students with a wide spectrum of academic interests. I encouraged them to undertake a term project related to their field of studies, as long as it included an account of their research and how their secondary sources contributed to the creation of their final product (a bit like this commentary). Art students handed in paintings and sculptures; music students composed, performed, and recorded musical pieces; writing majors wrote poetry and stories; theater majors wrote and staged plays; film students scripted, shot, and showed movies; philosophy majors wrote Platonic dialogues. My office became a museum of intriguing works of art.

“Beatrice often figured in the students’ projects, which gave me the idea for a piece that showed how things might have looked through her eyes. After I retired and began to dabble in ‘creative writing,’ I emulated my students and took on the project of drafting a story presented from her perspective. [. . .]” –Sante Matteo, “Commentary on ‘Escape from Paradise’,” Twelve Winters

Read Sante Matteo’s story “Escape from Paradise” at Twelve Winters‘ website here.

See also Sante Matteo’s poem “Assignation” (here) and his essay on Dante and baseball (here).

Contributed by Sante Matteo

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2021, Academia, Beatrice, Creative Writing, Fiction, Ohio, Oxford (Ohio), Paradise, Pedagogy, Short Stories, Student Projects, United States, Universities

“Stai fermo un girone: Un gioco per scoprire Dante e il suo mondo”

January 9, 2022 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

“‘Stai fermo un girone’ è un gioco concepito sul modello del tradizionale ‘gioco dell’oca,’ dedicato all’Inferno di Dante Alighieri e alle discipline della ricerca umanistica coinvolte nello studio del Medioevo.

“Per avanzare e vincere non occorrono soltanto conoscenze sui canti, i personaggi e i temi infernali, ma ci si dovrà anche confrontare con diversi metodi di indagine applicati ai testi negli studi universitari: questa, anzi, sarà la porta d’accesso per guardare all’opera dantesca sullo sfondo dell’intero Medioevo, con la sua storia, le sue idee, la sua cultura, i problemi che si è posto e le risposte che ha provato a dare. Il gioco potrà servire a stimolare e consolidare l’apprendimento in studenti delle superiori che incontrino per la prima volta i versi danteschi, o essere occasione per tutti gli appassionati per rivivere e ricordare – in maniera più disimpegnata – letture del passato. Grazie ai suoi tre livelli di difficoltà, infatti, si adatta a tutti i giocatori, dai principianti agli esperti.

“Il formato stampabile e ritagliabile permette a ciascuno di costruirsi il suo set di carte, segnalini e tavola da gioco e di immergersi nell’Inferno e nel mondo di Dante.”   —Milano University Press website

The game—created by Guglielmo Barucci, Paolo Borsa, Rossana Guglielmetti, Luca Sacchi, and Roberto Tagliani—is available for download here (online since December 2021; last accessed January 9, 2022).

Contributed by Osvaldo Varieschi (MA, Florida State University ’23)

 

Categories: Dining & Leisure
Tagged with: 2021, 700th anniversary, Academia, Board Games, Educational Games, Games, Italy, Milan, Pedagogy, Playing Cards, Universities

Student-Led “In via Dante Network”

October 31, 2021 By Sephora Affa, FSU '24

in-via-dante-network

The “In Via Dante Network” is “a student-led initiative for Post-Graduate Students and Early-Career Researchers with an interest in Dante Studies.”    —In Via Dante Network

The group organizes events, creates opportunities for networking, and maintains a mailing list through which members can initiate collaborations, advertise events, and provide support. Sign up for the listserv here.

Learn more on their website here.

Categories: Digital Media
Tagged with: Academia, Collaboration, Networking, Student Projects, Students, Universities

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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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