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Mark Vernon on Dante for El Exquisito (May 2023)

June 2, 2023 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

“Concebido como un libro que puede leerse solo, como acompañante a la lectura de La Comedia, como una nueva narración de la historia original o como una interpretación de la misma, el autor parte de una premisa y una frustración: ‘La Divina Comedia cambia vidas’, comienza diciendo en la Introducción y así lo han experimentado lectores desde comienzos del siglo XIV. No obstante, ‘también ha habido lectores inseguros de cómo entender su ingenio’, abrumados ante el desafío de los textos que pueden revelar más vida cada vez que se leen, una vez se encuentra la vía de entrada a su laberinto. El problema es que, en la mayoría de ediciones contemporáneas, Vernon ha encontrado que los autores no están interesados en la obra que, en sus palabras, cataliza una transformación espiritual.

“’El mayor riesgo es tomar La Comedia muy literalmente, como si Dante estuviese hablando de una fácil transferencia a la realidad’. Sí hay un significado literal, reconoce Vernon, pero es la capa superficial del texto que a su vez entraña toda una elaboración metafórica: ‘Y esto es realmente lo que lo confunde a uno, lo reta, las contradicciones. Pero al mismo comunica algo de aquella misma revelación inicial’. El autor también reconoce el carácter alegórico del poema, que se relaciona con las implicaciones morales y el significado religioso de la peregrinación, pero concentra su trabajo en la ‘transformación revolucionaria que ocurre a lo largo del camino, y la manera en el cual Dante describe estos continuos cambios’.

[. . .]

“‘Esto se relaciona también con el amor, que es desear lo que es bello’.” –“Mark Vernon: Dante, Carlos III, las palabras y los significados,” El Exquisito (May 17, 2023)

Read the full interview here (Spanish language; subscription required).

Contributed by Joshua Roberts

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: Beauty, Christianity, Consciousness, Desire, England, King Charles III, Language, London, Love, Psychology, Psychotherapy, United Kingdom

“Our Desire is a Gift From the Stars,” A Unitarian Universalist Blogpost

January 23, 2023 By Sebastian Spadavecchio

roses

“The word desire comes from the Latin desiderare: ‘to long for,’ but the Latin desiderare comes from de sidere: ‘from the stars.’ From the stars.

“I find this extraordinary: to think that somehow our desire, our longing, is connected to the very stars in the sky. The stars, which share their light with us across such impossible distances of time and space. The poets might say our desire is a gift from the stars and is ultimately for them and the beauty and mystery and the creative fire and energy of which they are for us a sign.

“I’m reminded of the very last line of Dante’s Divine Comedy — Dante, the great medieval poet guided by his love for a human woman, Beatrice. In his imagination, his love and his longing for her lead him on a great journey all the way to Paradise and to a final vision of the love which moves and connects all things: l’amor che move il sole e le altre stelle… ‘the love that moves the sun and the other stars.’

“This love that moves the sun and the stars is with you too, body and spirit, and with everything and everyone. If we can live out of that, the rest will take care of itself.”    –Laura Horton-Ludwig, “Our Desire is a Gift From the Stars,” Unitarian Universalist Association

Categories: Digital Media, Written Word
Tagged with: Amor che move il sole e l'altre stelle, Blogposts, Blogs, Christianity, Desire, faith, Love, Love that Moves, Love that Moves the Sun and Other Stars, Paradise, Paradiso, Stars

“Radiating The Love That Moves The Sun And Stars” (2021 Blogpost)

January 16, 2023 By Gabriella Mola (FSU)

“Arguably the most important official document to proceed from the Second Vatican Council was the ‘Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,’ written ‘to unfold more fully’ the ‘inner nature and universal mission’ of the Church. (LG 1.) The document is better known by its Latin title, ‘Lumen Gentium,’ taken from its first sentence: ‘Christ is the light of nations.’ By proclaiming the Gospel, explains Lumen Gentium, the Church ‘brings the light of Christ to all people.’ It is fitting, therefore, that the theme of the bicentennial year of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati is ‘Radiate Christ.’

[. . .]

“And the light of Christ, a light greater than any other, is love. Indeed, in the final words of Dante’s Paradiso, it is the radiating ‘love that moves the sun and other stars.'”    –Dr. Kenneth Craycraft, “Radiating The Love That Moves The Sun and Stars,” The Catholic Telegraph, September 2, 2021

Categories: Digital Media, Written Word
Tagged with: 2021, Blogposts, Blogs, Christianity, God, Light, Love, Love that Moves the Sun and Other Stars, Theology

“The Love That Moves The Sun And Stars” Blogpost (2018)

November 19, 2022 By Gabriella Mola (FSU)

 

“The following week, I’m reading the end of Dante’s Divine Comedy, when Dante ascends the final level of paradise, the Empyrean, and with help from the Blessed Mother, he is able to gaze directly at God.

“Dante is dumbstruck, unable to describe in language what he saw, save that it propelled him into writing down the Divine Comedy:

gustave-dore-vision-of-purgatory-and-paradise-by-dante-alighieri‘Here my high imagining failed of power,
but already my desire and my will were turned,
like a wheel being moved evenly,
by the Love that moves the sun and other stars.’

“God’s love moves the Sun and Stars, but most importantly it moves our hardened hearts, in spite of the million little ways we try to keep it at arm’s length.” [. . .]    –Michael J. Sanem, Incarnation is Everywhere, October 12, 2018.

Categories: Digital Media, Written Word
Tagged with: 2018, Blogposts, Blogs, Christianity, God, Love that Moves, Love that Moves the Sun and Other Stars, Paradise, Paradiso, Spirituality, Stars, Theology

Kudzanai Chiurai, Charity (2013)

April 28, 2022 By Sephora Affa, FSU '24

pop-art-naomi-campbell-charles-taylor-mia-farrow-pink-building-background

“Dante echoes Saint Paul (Rom. 5:1-5) when he shows charity as born of hope, in turn generated by faith. These three virtues sum up all the celestial philosophy and constitute the very condition of salvation. Within the doctrinal field, the word indicates the fundamental attitude of the Father towards all His creatures, a relationship that finds its perfect form in the blessed [. . .] (Purgatorio, Canto XV, 71).”

Retrieved from The Divine Comedy: Heaven, Purgatory, and Hell Revisited by Contemporary African Artists by Simon Njami.

To learn more about the Zimbabwean artist and activist Kudzanai Chiurai, see Wikipedia. Read an interview with the artist about his related 2012 video work Iyeza on the RISD Museum blog.

 

 

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2013, Africa, Art Books, Charity, Christianity, Collages, Pop Culture, Purgatorio, St. Paul, Zimbabwe

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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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