Dante Today

Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

  • Submit a Citing
  • Map
  • Links
  • Bibliography
  • User’s Guide
  • Teaching Resources
  • About

“Italy: Bel Paese,” Hiking & Trekking Club

November 25, 2022 By Sebastian Spadavecchio

Italy-Bel-Paese-View-of-St-Peters-Basilica“’La bellezza si risveglia l’anima di agire.’ — Dante (‘Beauty awakens soul to act.’)

“The beauty of the Italian capital is undisputed. You just can’t take a wrong step in Rome which is one of the reasons why Italy is called ‘Bel Paese’ meaning ‘Beautiful country.’ To visit Rome is to start a love affair. The Italian capital is an epic metropolis that will steal your heart with its architectural masterpieces, its buzzing piazzas and its romantic cobbled lanes.”

–Kshitij Nair, Hiking & Trekking Club IIT Mandi

Categories: Digital Media, Places, Written Word
Tagged with: 2020, Beauty Awakens the Soul to Act, Blog, India, Italy, Rome, School, Students, Tourism, Travel

GAU Dante, 2021

May 12, 2022 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

Dante-Inferno-30-31-Street-Art-by-Korvo-for-GAU“GAU-Gallerie d’arte Urbana è un progetto che ha come obiettivo quello di importare un modello di risanamento urbano che riesca, a ispirare bellezza e funzionalità, attraverso la street art, applicata ad un oggetto di uso quotidiano come le campane della raccolta differenziata del vetro. Il progetto ha come obiettivo principale quello di creare un galleria d’arte urbana gratuita, fruibile in ogni momento dal cittadino, per ribadire il concetto dell’arte come bene comune, incentivando l’attenzione sulle tematiche di differenziazione dei rifiuti.

“Per la sua quinta edizione, GAU sceglie di omaggiare Dante Alighieri nel settimo centenario della sua morte. Gli artisti lavoreranno sui 34 canti dell’Inferno, attualizzandoli attraverso la peculiarità del proprio linguaggio artistico, reinterpretando simboli, luoghi e personaggi della Divina Commedia in chiave contemporanea.

“Moby Dick – Giusy Guerriero – Dez – Marta Quercioli – Zara Kiafar – Tito – Violetta Carpino – Kiddo – DesX – Yest – Er Pinto – Olives – Lola Poleggi – Kenji – BloodPurple – Orgh – Lady Nina – Teddy Killer – Valerio Paolucci – Wuarky – Karma Factory  – Muges147 – Maudit – Hoek – Alessandra Carloni – Cipstrega – Molecole – Korvo – Alekos Reize – Gojo.”   —Gallerie d’Arte Urbana

See a gallery of all 34 decorated recycling bins, one for each canto of the Inferno, on the GAU website. You can also download the magazine on the site, which includes a map where visitors to Rome can locate each bin.

The image above features Korvo’s design for cantos 30-31. Photo credit Valentino Bonacquisti.

Categories: Image Mosaic, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2021, Dante Portraits, Face of Dante, Inferno, Italy, Paintings, Recycling, Rome, Street Art, Urban Art

Convict-Actors Recite Dante

November 27, 2021 By Hannah Raisner, FSU '25

screenshot-of-image-of-performance-from-news-article

“Three long-term convicts turned actors who appeared in the Taviani brothers’ prison-set Caesar Must Die Shakespearian film drama are to get out of jail for three hours to recite Dante’s Inferno at a Rome university symposium Thursday marking the 700th anniversary of the Supreme Poet’s death.

“Filippo, Giovanni and Francesco, serving lengthy terms for criminal association in the mafia wing of Rebibbia Prison, will be special guests at the event organized by the pontifical Dante commission.

“The three men said they hoped the three hours would be long enough for them to ‘see the stars again’ like Dante does when he emerges from the pit of Hell.”    –ANSA, November 23, 2021

Categories: Performing Arts, Places
Tagged with: 700th anniversary, Hell, Inferno, Italy, Live Performances, Mafia, Paolo and Francesca, Performance Art, Prisons, Rome, Stars, Ugolino, Ulysses, Universities

Dante’s Divine Comedy Sent Into Space

November 10, 2021 By Hannah Raisner, FSU '25

image-of-dante-bust-in-rome

“…A copy of the entire Divine Comedy, micro-inscribed on sheets of a titanium and gold alloy, will be sent up into space and left there to float in the heavens among the stars that Dante wrote about.

The last word in each of the three parts is ‘stelle’ (stars), including the famous final line which defines God as ‘The love that moves the sun and the other stars.’

For the space project, two sheets measuring about 29 cm by 43 cm (11 X 17 inches) and folded in four, accordion style, will each be inscribed with the entire poem of some 14,200 lines containing about 32,000 words.”    –Phillip Pullella, Reuters, June 10, 2021

Categories: Odds & Ends
Tagged with: 2021, 2022, International Space Station, Reuters, Rome, Space

Pier Paolo Pasolini, La Divina Mimesis (1975)

October 24, 2021 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

“[. . .] Ecco l’incipit de La Divina Mimesis: «Intorno ai quarant’anni, mi accorsi di trovarmi in un momento molto oscuro della mia vita. Qualunque cosa facessi, nella Selva della realtà del 1963, anno in cui ero giunto, assurdamente impreparato a quell’esclusione dalla vita degli altri che è la ripetizione della propria, c’era un senso di oscurità. Non direi di nausea, o di angoscia: anzi, in quella oscurità, per dire il vero, c’era qualcosa di terribilmente luminoso: la luce della vecchia verità, se vogliamo, quella davanti a cui non c’è più niente da dire».

“È un incipit terribile. Solitudine, aridità, vecchiaia, morte. Fine di ogni illusione. Non c’è più niente da dire. Il popolo vagheggiato da Pasolini non esiste più, è diventato piccolo borghese. La società contadina è stata spazzata via dal capitalismo globale. Il Potere non ha più volto, ci sono nuovi padroni, ma chi sono? L’omologazione completa, il conformismo totale, si fanno strada implacabili attraverso i media, in particolare la televisione. Moriremo di risate, l’intrattenimento al posto della cultura. Il consumismo sarà la nuova ‘ideologia,’ simpatica e tollerante per finta, totalitaria nella realtà. Al nuovo mercato mondiale, occorrono consumatori fatti con lo stampino, uguali uno all’altro, intercambiabili: è una questione di efficienza, e l’efficienza è l’unica regola del capitalismo globale. [. . .]”    –Alessandro Gnocchi, “L’Inferno di Pasolini,” Insula Europea (October 24, 2021)

Read the rest of Alessandro Gnocchi’s discussion of La Divina Mimesis here.

Read a selection (“Canto VII”), translated into English by Bruce Merry, in the London Magazine’s Archives.

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 1975, Capitalism, Consumerism, Ideology, Italian, Italian Politics, Italy, Marxism, Nel Mezzo del Cammin, Political Commentary, Politics, Prose, Rome, Selva oscura, Social Commentary

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • …
  • 5
  • Next Page »

Frequent Tags

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 700th anniversary Abandon All Hope Album Art Albums America American Politics Art Artists Beatrice Blogs Books California Circles of Hell Comics Covid-19 Dark Wood Divine Comedy England Fiction Films Florence France Games Gates of Hell Gustave Doré Heavy Metal Hell History Humor Illustrations Inferno Internet Italian Italy Journalism Journeys Literary Criticism Literature Love Metal Music New York New York City Non-Fiction Novels Paintings Paolo and Francesca Paradise Paradiso Performance Art Poetry Politics Purgatorio Purgatory Religion Restaurants Reviews Rock Science Fiction Sculptures Social Media Spirituality Technology Television Tenth Circle Theater Translations United Kingdom United States Universities Video Games Virgil

ALL TAGS »

Image Mosaic

Recent Dante Citings

  • Kat Mustatea, Ambivaland (2023)
  • Hozier, Unreal Unearth (2023 album)
  • Brenda Clough, “Clio’s Scroll” (2023)
  • Arcade Fire, “End of the Empire IV” (2022)
  • The Volcano Store, Castle Crashers Video Game (2008)
  • Paterson (2016 film)
  • Mark Vernon on Dante for El Exquisito (May 2023)

Categories

  • Consumer Goods (196)
  • Digital Media (151)
  • Dining & Leisure (108)
  • Image Mosaic (100)
  • Music (246)
  • Odds & Ends (91)
  • Performing Arts (367)
  • Places (134)
  • Uncategorized (1)
  • Visual Art & Architecture (427)
  • Written Word (873)

Submit a Sighting

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.

Creative

© 2006-2023 Dante Today