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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

Ignite the Sky by Crawlspace

April 16, 2023 By Cory Balon

ignite-the-sky-crawlspaceThe album Ignite the Sky, by the metal band Crawlspace was released in 1999. The cover art for the album features a Gustave Doré illustration of the Inferno. The illustration, titled The Erinnys, is a depiction of Canto 9.

Find Ignite the Sky here.

Find The Erinnys by Gustave Doré here.

Contributed by Gianluca Giuseffi Grippa 

Categories: Music
Tagged with: 1999, Album Art, Albums, England, Gustave Doré, Heavy Metal, Illustrations, Metal

Subterranean Forgotten Caverns by Ghoul

April 5, 2023 By Cory Balon

subterranean-forgotten-caverns-ghoulSubterranean Forgotten Caverns is an album released in 2004 by the metal band Ghoul. The art for the album cover is the illustration, Evil Counsellors, by Gustave Doré. The illustration is from Canto 26 of the Inferno. 

Find Subterranean Forgotten Caverns here.

Find Evil Counsellors Gustave Doré here.

Contributed by Gianluca Giuseffi Grippa 

Categories: Music
Tagged with: 2004, Album Art, Albums, England, Greece, Gustave Doré, Heavy Metal, Illustrations, Metal

Max Hastings, Editor: An Inside Story of Newspapers (2003)

October 28, 2022 By Cory Balon

max-hastings-editor-a-memoir“We’re taking part in a divine comedy and we should realise that the play is always a comedy, in that we’re all ultimately ridiculous.”  —Max Hastings, Editor: An Inside Story of Newspapers

Read more about Max Hastings’s memoir, covering his editorship of The Telegraph from 1985 to 2002, in The Guardian (“The view from Hastings,” October 12, 2002).

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2003, Authors, Comedy, England, Journalism, Memoirs, Newspapers, United Kingdom

Austin Osman Spare, Earth Inferno (1905)

January 3, 2022 By Professor Arielle Saiber


Created and published when Spare was 18 years old.  “Influenced heavily by Dante’s Inferno the book is decorated with poems and aphorisms in an aesthetic style and clearly shows the design influence of Spare’s early supporter Charles Ricketts. Each pair of pages contains a painting and a commentary toward that painting. In addition to excerpts from Dante, the book also contains excerpts from Edward FitzGerald‘s translation of Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.”   –wikipedia

“London: Privately Published. 1905. First Edition. Hardcover. Folio (18″ x 13.75”). 30pp. … Eleven large black and white illustrations (mostly full page) and numerous decorations by Spare throughout. The scarce first edition of Spare’s first published book, SIGNED and numbered by the author. The book was printed for Spare at the Co-operative Printing Society in Tudor Street, London, in February 1905, in an edition of 265 signed and numbered copies… Earth Inferno was a truly remarkable first book. In it the young artist juxtaposed huge, sometimes sinister images with teasing lyrics to create a vivid image of the darkly magical philosophy which informed his world-view.”   —Weiser Antiquarian Books

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 1905, England, Esotericism, Illustration, Inferno, London, Occultism

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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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