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Poets in Purgatory (2021)

August 26, 2021 By Professor Arielle Saiber


“Dante’s Purgatorio has been described as the most ‘human’ of the three parts of his Comedy, and it can also be seen as a ‘singing school’ for poets. This new complete translation by sixteen contemporary poets enters into dialogue with Dante’s text by rendering it in a variety of different Anglophone voices – American, Australian, British, Irish, Jamaican, Scottish and Singaporean. The poets in this Purgatorio adopt a range of forms, from blank verse to terza rima, and their translations are accompanied by explanatory notes, a ‘prelude’ of poems about Purgatory, and a ‘postscript’ of newly-translated medieval Italian lyrics relating to Dante and his poem.”   —Arc Publications and Amazon

Edited by Nick Havely with Bernard O’Donoghue

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2021, Poetry, Purgatorio, Purgatory, Translations

Adam Roberts, Purgatory Mount (2021)

July 19, 2021 By Professor Arielle Saiber

“An interstellar craft is decelerating after its century-long voyage. Its destination is V538 Aurigae, a now-empty planet dominated by one gigantic megastructure, a conical mountain of such height that its summit is high above the atmosphere. The ship’s crew of five hope to discover how the long-departed builders made such a colossal thing, and why: a space elevator? a temple? a work of art? Its resemblance to the mountain of purgatory lead the crew to call this world Dante.

“In our near future, the United States is falling apart. A neurotoxin has interfered with the memory function of many of the population, leaving them reliant on their phones as makeshift memory prostheses. But life goes on. For Ottoline Barragão, a regular kid juggling school and her friends and her beehives in the back garden, things are about to get very dangerous, chased across the north-east by competing groups, each willing to do whatever it takes to get inside Ottoline’s private network and recover the secret inside.

“Purgatory Mount, Adam Roberts’s first SF novel for three years, combines wry space opera and a fast-paced thriller in equal measure. It is a novel about memory and atonement, about exploration and passion, and like all of Roberts’s novels it’s not quite like anything else.”    —Amazon

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2021, America, Journeys, Literature, Novels, Planets, Purgatorio, Purgatory, Science Fiction, Space, Thrillers, United States

Jews in Dante

July 18, 2021 By Professor Arielle Saiber


“This year, commemorations of the 700th anniversary of the death of the Italian poet Dante Alighieri, author of The Divine Comedy, have scarcely addressed the subject of how Dante wrote about Jews.

“Dante places a number of Old Testament Jews, including Abraham, Sarah, Rachel and Joshua in Paradise. Because some of the limited space is left empty there for Christians, the complement of Jews who prefigure the New Testament is full; so there are, at least temporarily, more Jews in Dante’s Paradise than Christians.

“Dante’s Purgatory includes the story of Mordecai and Haman to decry the sin of anger, whereas Daniel is praised for his temperance. In his Paradise, Dante likewise lauds Joshua and Judas Maccabeus as combatants for righteousness, while King David and Hezekiah from the Second Book of Kings and Second Book of Chronicles are exalted as just monarchs.” […].   –Benjamin Ivry, The Forward, July 18, 2021

See the rest of this essay for many more references to Jews in Dante’s works, and Jews who have cited Dante as inspiration for their work and thought.  It is debatable, however, that there are no Jews in Inferno.

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2021, 700th anniversary, Adam, Beatrice, Carlo Michelstaedter, De vulgari eloquentia, Giorgio Voghera, Immanuel ben Solomon ben Jekuthiel, Inferno, Israel, Italy, Jewish, Livorno, Lorenzo Da Ponte, Osip Mandelstam, Paradiso, Primo Levi, Purgatorio, Quaestio de aqua et terra, Verona

IKEA: The 10th circle of hell

June 16, 2021 By Ezra Berman '23

Ikea

“It’s fitting that IKEA stores are organised in a series of winding circles with no easy escape. It’s not unlike the circles of hell that the protagonist of Dante’s Inferno must wander before heading on to Purgatory and then Heaven.

“But unlike the soul in Dante’s epic poem, you never get to Heaven. What awaits you once you’ve managed to locate and then purchase your Tuffing and Malfors is yet another circle of hell. This one is in your own home and the instrument of torture is an Allen key.” [. . .]

–Kasey Edwards, The Sydney Morning Herald, July 15, 2019

Categories: Consumer Goods
Tagged with: 2019, Australia, Circles of Hell, IKEA, Inferno, Paradiso, Purgatorio, Shopping, Sydney, Torture

Beatrice by William Dyce

June 11, 2021 By Ezra Berman '23

“This painting was commissioned by [Dyce’s] friend, the Victorian prime minister WE Gladstone, a great Dante enthusiast. The model for Dante’s heroine was – at Gladstone’s request – Marian Summerhayes, an artist’s model and former prostitute “rescued” by the Liberal politician. It is possible that Dyce also used some photographic studies of the sitter to work from, which could explain the pensive stillness of his Beatrice, who is painted in three-quarter view and has a sculptured quality about it.

‘Dyce’s Beatrice sits serenely, her downcast eyes concentrating on something we cannot see within the picture space, thus elevating herself from this present to another time and place.” [. . .]    –Griffin Coe, The Guardian, May 3, 2021

This entry is part of the Guardian’s Great British Art Tour 2021

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture, Written Word
Tagged with: 2021, Art, Beatrice, London, Muses, Paintings, Paradiso, Purgatorio, United Kingdom, Visual Art

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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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