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Mark Vernon on Dante for El Exquisito (May 2023)

June 2, 2023 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

“Concebido como un libro que puede leerse solo, como acompañante a la lectura de La Comedia, como una nueva narración de la historia original o como una interpretación de la misma, el autor parte de una premisa y una frustración: ‘La Divina Comedia cambia vidas’, comienza diciendo en la Introducción y así lo han experimentado lectores desde comienzos del siglo XIV. No obstante, ‘también ha habido lectores inseguros de cómo entender su ingenio’, abrumados ante el desafío de los textos que pueden revelar más vida cada vez que se leen, una vez se encuentra la vía de entrada a su laberinto. El problema es que, en la mayoría de ediciones contemporáneas, Vernon ha encontrado que los autores no están interesados en la obra que, en sus palabras, cataliza una transformación espiritual.

“’El mayor riesgo es tomar La Comedia muy literalmente, como si Dante estuviese hablando de una fácil transferencia a la realidad’. Sí hay un significado literal, reconoce Vernon, pero es la capa superficial del texto que a su vez entraña toda una elaboración metafórica: ‘Y esto es realmente lo que lo confunde a uno, lo reta, las contradicciones. Pero al mismo comunica algo de aquella misma revelación inicial’. El autor también reconoce el carácter alegórico del poema, que se relaciona con las implicaciones morales y el significado religioso de la peregrinación, pero concentra su trabajo en la ‘transformación revolucionaria que ocurre a lo largo del camino, y la manera en el cual Dante describe estos continuos cambios’.

[. . .]

“‘Esto se relaciona también con el amor, que es desear lo que es bello’.” –“Mark Vernon: Dante, Carlos III, las palabras y los significados,” El Exquisito (May 17, 2023)

Read the full interview here (Spanish language; subscription required).

Contributed by Joshua Roberts

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: Beauty, Christianity, Consciousness, Desire, England, King Charles III, Language, London, Love, Psychology, Psychotherapy, United Kingdom

“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

Leonora Carrington, “Amor che move il Sole et l’altre stelle” (1946)

November 24, 2022 By Gabriella Mola (FSU)

“[T]he title of the painting above, Amor che move il sole l’altre stelle, comes from the Italian poet and father of the Italian language, Dante Alighieri. The painting is instead by British surrealist, Leonora Carrington.

“According to one interpretation of Dante’s Divine Comedy, love is the driving force behind everything. The universe and our planet. God was, without a doubt, Dante’s — and maybe Carrington’s — meaning of ultimate love. Thus, love is as powerful as a god, and love (as God) is the most powerful source of energy and everything else (and the other stars…). [. . .]    –Jess the Avocado, “Love will Move the Sun and Other Stars,” Medium, May 24

View Amor che move and other paintings by Leonora Carrington here.

Read more about Carrington’s biography and how she “feminized surrealism” in The New Yorker.

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 1946, Amor che move il sole e l'altre stelle, Love, Love that Moves the Sun and Other Stars, Mexico, Mexico City, Paintings, Surrealism, United Kingdom

Max Hastings, Editor: An Inside Story of Newspapers (2003)

October 28, 2022 By Cory Balon

max-hastings-editor-a-memoir“We’re taking part in a divine comedy and we should realise that the play is always a comedy, in that we’re all ultimately ridiculous.”  —Max Hastings, Editor: An Inside Story of Newspapers

Read more about Max Hastings’s memoir, covering his editorship of The Telegraph from 1985 to 2002, in The Guardian (“The view from Hastings,” October 12, 2002).

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 2003, Authors, Comedy, England, Journalism, Memoirs, Newspapers, United Kingdom

Dante in the British Library: Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven

April 11, 2022 By Harrison Betz, FSU '25

dante_in_the_british_library_event_screenshot

On September 14, 2021, the British Library in London hosted an online event titled “Dante in the British Library: Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven”. The event featured two lectures on Dante about the following:

“Alessandro Scafi – Mapping Paradise in the Middle Ages: Dante and the Garden of Eden

“Christian scholars and map-makers of the late Middle Ages were dedicated to the search for the Garden of Eden, as described in Genesis. Could paradise be found on a map? Dante’s knowledge of geographical lore was deep, rich, and varied, and his Divine Comedy echoes contemporary debates about the location and the mapping of paradise.

“Elisabeth Trischler – Architecture and the Afterlife: How the Urban Spaces of Medieval Florence inspired Dante’s Divine Comedy

“The city of Florence underwent a significant building boom in the 13th and 14th centuries, and this expansion offers a way to explore Dante’s world. This lecture uses illustrations of the Divine Comedy from the British Library’s collection to show how Dante’s masterpiece was shaped by Florence’s urban spaces.” [. . .]    —The British Library (retrieved April 11, 2022)

View the event’s listing on the British Library’s website here.

Categories: Places
Tagged with: 2021, Architecture, Cultural Events, Lectures, Libraries, London, Maps, United Kingdom

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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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