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Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

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“5 Things To Know About Schiaparelli’s Dante-Inspired SS23 Couture Show,” Vogue Article

February 1, 2023 By Sebastian Spadavecchio

“From divisive foam animal heads to Daniel Roseberry’s meditation on Dante’s Inferno, British Vogue’s fashion critic Anders Christian Madsen shares five things to know about Schiaparelli’s spring/summer 2023 couture show, which opened Couture Fashion Week this season.

[. . .]

“In his self-penned show notes, Roseberry cited Dante’s Inferno as the inspiration behind the collection, likening its protagonist’s uncertain journey into hell to the doubt that falls upon a designer like himself when he sits down to design. ‘This collection is my homage to doubt,’ he wrote. ‘I wanted to step away from techniques I was comfortable with and understood, to choose instead that dark wood where everything is scary but new.’ The feeling of the inferno appeared more as a spiritual reference than a direct one, unless your idea of hell is being trapped inside a massive faux taxidermy wolf, Midsommar style. (Naomi Campbell, who was given the honour, seemed typically unfazed.) Along with the lion and the snow leopard, it represented the animals Dante equates to lust, pride and avarice. A reference to the friendly giants he encounters in hell, a hammered brass and patina handmade giant’s head hit the runway with equal theatrical effect.

[. . .]
“Roseberry’s show notes finished on a sentimental key: ‘Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso,’ he wrote, referring to the three books that make up The Divine Comedy. ‘One cannot exist without the others. It is a reminder that there is no such thing as heaven without hell; there is no joy without sorrow; there is no ecstasy of creation without the torture of doubt. My prayer for myself is that I remember that always – that, on my most difficult days, when inspiration just won’t come, I remember that no ascension to heaven is possible without first a trip to the fires, and the fear that comes with it. Let me embrace it always.’ As a wise lion once said: Hakuna matata.”    –Anders Christian Madsen, “5 Things to Know About Schiaparelli’s Dante-Inspired SS23 Couture Show”, Vogue, January 23, 2023
For more on the show (and the controversies it stirred), see the New York Times‘ coverage here and here.
Contributed by Caleb Taylor (Florida State University ’26) and others. Thanks to all who sent links!

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2023, Couture, Dark Wood, Doubt, Fashion, Hell, Inferno, Lion, Magazines, Selva oscura, United Kingdom

CamerAnebbia’s 3-D Comedia (2021)

January 27, 2023 By Sebastian Spadavecchio

dante-confronting-the-beasts-of-infernos-dark-wood

In 2021, CamerAnebbia created a 3-D interactive, immersive storybook using images from a manuscript edition of the Divine Comedy held in the British Library. Visit the project’s website or learn more on Vimeo.

Categories: Digital Media, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2021, 3D Technology, Dark Wood, Digital Art, Illustrations, Inferno, Italy, Manuscripts, Selva oscura

Un Dante di destra? Vignetta di Giannelli, Corriere della Sera (gennaio 2023)

January 25, 2023 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

vignetta-giannelli-Dante-selva-oscura-Meloni-domanda-se-e-di-destra

La vignetta di Giannelli, Corriere della Sera (16 gennaio 2023)

Contributed by Paolo Valisa

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2023, Cartoons, Italian Politics, Italy, Nel Mezzo del Cammin, Newspapers, Political Leaders, Politics, Satire, Selva oscura

Edward Hirsch, Big Think Interview (2010)

December 2, 2022 By Cory Balon

edward-hirsch

“There’s been no poet, no great poet in the history of poetry who hasn’t also been a great reader of poetry. This is sometimes distressing to my students when I tell them this. Now, I do say, ‘It’s possible. You might be the first. I’m not saying it’s impossible, but the odds are very much against you.’ All great poets have been great readers and the way to learn your craft in poetry is by reading other poetry and by letting it guide you.

“A great model for this is the way that Dante calls on Virgil at the beginning of The Inferno, The Divine Comedy, to help guide him through the underworld. And, in a way, that’s also a recognition that Dante needs Virgil and that the Inferno needs the Aeneid and that the epic needs a model and that for Dante to write this great poem he needs someone to come before him and he turns to Virgil’s text, especially book six where Aeneas goes down into the underworld. And for me, that’s a model of the poet’s relationship to previous poetry, to another poetry as calling out for guidance.”   –Edward Hirsch, Interview in Big Think (2010)

Edward Hirsch is the current president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. Watch his full interview for Big Think here.

Categories: Digital Media, Written Word
Tagged with: 2010, Aeneid, Dark Wood, Epic Poetry, Guides, Inferno, Interviews, Journeys, Poetry, Poets, Reading, Selva oscura, Virgil

Dante’s Compass and the Mid-Life Course Correction

October 24, 2022 By Sebastian Spadavecchio

nature-background-hand-holding-a-compas-text-quoting-dante

“Midway upon the journey of our life
I found myself within a forest of dark
For the straightforward pathway had been lost” (–Dante)

“You had a plan. You’ve been moving down the path toward your goals, investing all the while. And then, somewhere along the way, something changed. You found the path was no longer the one you wanted to be on so now you’re navigating a mid-life course correction. This could be making a career change, getting divorce papers, selling/buying a business, or pursuing a passion. The good news is, studies show adults making a mid-life career change can be very successful and report making the move made them happier. Before you make the big leap, let’s go through some of the steps and questions anyone embarking on a major life change might consider to ensure a smooth transition to the next chapter of their life.”  –Karyn Damschen, “Steps to a Successful Mid-Life Course Correction,” Retirement Evolutions (Retrieved on October 19, 2022)

Adults reaching the midway point of their lives look to Dante for guidance to avoid navigating themselves into their own dark wood.

Categories: Digital Media
Tagged with: Adulthood, Careers, Dark Wood, Images, Inferno, Mid-life Crisis, Middle age, Nel Mezzo del Cammin, Self-Help, Selva oscura

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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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