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James Fenton on Mandelstam’s Dante

October 30, 2020 By Jasmine George, FSU '24

“The poet’s widow describes how, at a point when Mandelstam refers to Dante’s need to lean on authority, she refused to write his words down, thinking that he meant the authority of rulers, and that he condoned Dante’s acceptance of their favours. ‘The word had no other meaning for us,’ she says, ‘and being heartily sick of such authorities, I wanted no others of any kind.’ ‘Haven’t you had enough of such authorities?’ I yelled at him, sitting in front of a blank, grey-coloured sheet of paper, my hands defiantly on my knees. ‘Do you still want more?'”

“Mandelstam was furious with her for getting above herself. She was angry back, and told him to find another wife. But in due course she did what the circumstances required during the Stalinist persecution: she learnt the essay by heart, in order to ensure its survival. It wasn’t printed until three decades later, in 1967, when an edition of 25,000 copies appeared in Moscow and quickly sold out – the first of Mandelstam’s works to appear after the thaw.

“The argument about authority warns us to read Mandelstam’s essay not only for what it tells us about Dante but also as a reflection on our own times, and Mandelstam’s. [. . .]”   –James Fenton, The Guardian, 2005

See full article here.

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2005, Authoritarianism, Authorities, Authors, Columns, Literary Criticism, Mandelstam, Moscow, Poems, Poetry, Politics, Russia

Cheating Spouses Warned by Dante’s Inferno

October 26, 2019 By lsanchez

inquirer-cheating-spouses

“There, Dante encounters real historical characters such as Cleopatra of Egypt who had two children with Mark Anthony of the Roman Empire, and various personalities in the Greek mythology like Helen, earth’s most beautiful woman, who was married to King Menelaus of Sparta but was abducted by Paris of Troy; and Achilleus, the hero of the Trojan War – all consumed by sexual desires.”    — Dr. Jose Mario Bautista Maximiano, Inquirer, August 29, 2019

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2019, Columns, Inferno, Lust

Dante at the Beach

September 12, 2015 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

DantePanel13The New York Times Magazine published an illustrated column, “Dante at the Beach,” in August 2015. An interpretation of Dante’s levels of hell, the column is from Christoph Niemann’s Abstract Sunday.

To see the whole column, click here.

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2015, Circles of Hell, Columns, Comics, Hell, Illustrations, Inferno

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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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