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Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

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“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

Mural project for wall of art school in Lazio, Italy, co-ordinated by Diego della Posta (Mr Thoms), graffiti artist

November 24, 2022 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

mural-of-lucifer-principium-initiatum-by-mr-thoms“Mr Thoms (Diego Della Posta) was invited to head a project to celebrate young people in Dante’s world, inspired by Dante’s reference in Vita Nova of  ‘Gioventude, etate che puote giovare’ (Youth, ages that can benefit). The students, under Mr Thoms’ direction, created this stunning mural on the wall outside their school in the region of Frosinone, Lazio.”

Contributed by Emma Marigliano

See Diego Della Posta’s photos of the 2022 mural project (including the image above) on Bēhance.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged with: 2022, Inferno, Italy, Lazio, Lucifer, Murals, Schools, Street Art, Student Projects, Students, Vita Nuova

Kimiya Memarzadeh, “Academia’s Inferno” (April 4, 2016)

May 5, 2022 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

person-behind-books“In high school I read a book called Inferno by Dante Alighieri. [. . .] I want to take you through the nine circles of suffering every graduate student experiences on their journey to defending their thesis. I’m sure there are far more than nine forms of struggle that graduate students go through, but for the purpose of the analogy, we will stick with nine.

[. . .]

“Defeat is another circle that graduate students become quite familiar with. It happens so often that around the two-year mark of grad school, most of us seem to get desensitized to it. We learn to separate our self-worth from the worth of our work, and to focus on doing the best we can without letting defeat get in the way of our confidence. We build a thicker skin, and if nothing else, this circle of suffering will prepare us for a lifetime of rejected grants and harsh criticism from pesky ‘Reviewer Three.’

“This brings us to the last and probably most dangerous circle – doubt. Part of being a scientist is being a skeptic. However, if you constantly doubt yourself, your progress, or your ideas, you will inevitably make your graduate school experience a painful one. Go confidently in the direction you pursue, and if you fail – well then you’re just back at circle one.” –Kimiya Memarzadeh, “Academia’s Inferno,” McGovern Medical School (April 4, 2016)

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2016, Academia, America, American Universities, Blogposts, Circles of Hell, Graduate School, Science, Student Life, Students, Universities

Student-Led “In via Dante Network”

October 31, 2021 By Sephora Affa, FSU '24

in-via-dante-network

The “In Via Dante Network” is “a student-led initiative for Post-Graduate Students and Early-Career Researchers with an interest in Dante Studies.”    —In Via Dante Network

The group organizes events, creates opportunities for networking, and maintains a mailing list through which members can initiate collaborations, advertise events, and provide support. Sign up for the listserv here.

Learn more on their website here.

Categories: Digital Media
Tagged with: Academia, Collaboration, Networking, Student Projects, Students, Universities

Dante’s Purgatorio, video game by Charlie McKinney

October 18, 2021 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

Charlie McKinney of DeMatha Catholic High School (Hyattsville, Maryland) built a text-based video game based on Dante’s Purgatorio. The game was created as a project for ethics and theology teacher Homer Twigg’s unit on Dante’s Purgatorio in 2021. Check out the game here.

Categories: Digital Media
Tagged with: 2021, High School, Hyattsville, Maryland, Pedagogy, Purgatorio, Student Projects, Students, United States, Video Games

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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.

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