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“Meeting the Shadow: From Dante’s Inferno to a World of Compassion” (2011)

January 25, 2023 By Gabriella Mola (FSU)

circular-ring-in-the-center-of-a-book-with-a-heart-shaped-shadow“In European mythology, this specific process of self-discovery (meeting the shadow) is usually depicted as the hero literally descending into the underworld and meeting the dead. Whether it’s in The Odyssey or The Divine Comedy or the Harry Potter tales (in which Harry frequently visits past events), the first part of the process involves going into a netherworld that allows the traveler (and the reader) to think differently about the nature of the everyday world.

[. . .]

“Dante’s message is clear, though: he asks us to observe what the tendencies are that keep these poor souls stuck in Hell.  When we see these failings in others, we can know them, avoid them, and as we learn from them we will grow in compassion. For we will see that these faults lies within each of us, too. Only then can we move beyond these ego-longings that will stop us from experiencing synchronicity.

[. . .]

“As Dante proceeds, he leaves the realm of men and sin far behind, and under the care of Beatrice he finds his way toward Heaven and the Virgin Mary. Whether we believe in a Christian worldview or not, the psy­chic process Dante describes is important. Dante, we notice, is now in a more female world. Virgil, the male poet, has guided Dante, the male poet, through Hell and through Purgatory, but Virgil cannot take Dante all the way on this spiritual journey: the pure saintly Beatrice, a woman, is the only one who can guide Dante forward now.

“To spell this out simply: the idealized virginal Beatrice leads the poet to the ideal female, the pure mother symbol of the Virgin Mary.

“What Dante learns after understanding the destructive part of himself and rejecting it, leaving it behind in Hell, is that only then can his real salvation befound, in this opposite-sex world of gentleness and love. [. . .]”  — Dr. Allan G. Hunter, “Meeting the Shadow: From Dante’s Inferno to a World of Compassion,” InnerSelf, June 1, 2011

Excerpted from Allan G. Hunter’s book The Path of Synchronicity: Align Yourself with Your Life’s Flow (Findhorn Press, 2011).

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2011, Articles, Books, Hero's Journey, Heroes, Journeys, Jung, Literature, Mythology, Self-Help

Joseph Campbell, The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949)

November 4, 2022 By Cory Balon

the-hero-with-a-thousand-faces-jospeh-campbell“The happy ending of the fairy tale, the myth, and the divine comedy of the soul, is to be read, not as a contradiction, but as a transcendence of the universal tragedy of man. The objective world remains what it was, but, because of a shift of emphasis within the subject, is beheld as though transformed. Where formerly life and death contended, now enduring being is made manifest-as indifferent to the accidents of time as water boiling in a pot is to the destiny of a bubble, or as the cosmos to the appearance and disappearance of a galaxy of stars.”  —Joseph Campbell, The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Chapter 2)

 

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 1949, Cosmos, Essays, Heroes, Literary Criticism, Myth, Stars, Transformation

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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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