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Why Does Everyone Love Dante? Article, Jason M. Baxter (2021)

January 12, 2022 By Harrison Betz, FSU '25

baxter_dante_article_screenshot“No other artist has aged as well as Dante Alighieri. He has never really gone out of fashion, except perhaps during the Enlightenment. Just after his death, his Divine Comedy was the subject of heavy-duty theological commentaries in Latin, a level of study generally reserved for works of sacred theology. A century later, during the Renaissance, ambitious designers, whose heads were full of cartography and perspective and new worlds, ambitiously mapped out Dante’s view of the afterlife, as if it were a newly discovered continent (see, for example, Botticelli’s famous map of hell).

“Now, during the 700th anniversary year of Dante’s death, Pope Francis has written an apostolic letter in his honor, calling him a ‘prophet of hope’ and a ‘witness to the innate yearning for the infinite present in the human heart.’

“In short, nothing makes you crave mercy, thirst for it with a dry mouth, quite like Dante’s avant-garde, modernist poem of pain and human failure. And I think this is what has motivated the pope to turn literary critic! At the heart of Dante’s poem is a fragmented vision. But paradoxically, it was precisely because Dante’s human plans failed him that he, purged of mere earthly longing, could emerge as the poet of hope and desire and mercy.” [. . .]    –Jason M. Baxter, America, the Jesuit Review, August 20, 2021 (retrieved January 12, 2022)

Read the full text of Baxter’s article here.

Also, check out our post on Baxter’s book about the Divine Comedy here.

Categories: Written Word
Tagged with: 700th anniversary, Articles, Commentary, Desire, Essays, Hope, Mercy, Popes, Reviews, United States

Dante in the Berkshires: “Abandon All Despair”

July 29, 2021 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

Dante-in-the-Berkshires-Abandon-All-Despair-Bookstore-Sign

Sign displayed above The Bookstore and Get Lit Wine Bar in Lenox, MA (Summer 2021).

Photo courtesy of Christian Dupont, contributed by Christian and Silvia Dupont

Categories: Places
Tagged with: 2021, Abandon All Hope, Bookstores, Gates of Hell, Hope, Lenox, Massachusetts

Infiorata di Noto, Omaggio a Dante (2021)

May 17, 2021 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

42a-Infiorata-di-Noto-Omaggio-a-Dante-2021

“L’infiorata di Noto is an annual event in Noto, Sicilia, which creates an extended street design made entirely of flowers. This year’s design is dedicated to the 700th anniversary of Dante’s death.”   –Contributor Kate McKee

“La 42esima Infiorata di via Nicolaci si farà e sarà un omaggio a Dante Alighieri. Si svolgerà dal 14 al 16 maggio, nel massimo rispetto delle normative anticontagio da Covid-19, privilegiando ancora una volta il messaggio di forza, speranza e resilienza che Noto vuole mandare al Mondo intero, come già successo con l’edizione 2020 dal tema ‘La Bellezza è più Forte della Paura’.”   —Infiorata di Noto website (accessed May 17, 2021)

The theme of this year’s annual festival is “E quindi uscimmo a riveder le stelle,” which, as the above citation explains, celebrates the strength, hope, and resilience of Noto in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Contributed by Kate McKee (Bowdoin College ’22)

Categories: Places
Tagged with: 2021, 700th anniversary, Covid-19, Festivals, Flowers, Hope, Italy, Noto, Pandemic, Resilience, Sicily, Stars, stelle, Strength

In Dante Veritas, Vasily Klyukin

February 5, 2020 By lsanchez

“In Dante Veritas is a large scale, immersive multimedia exhibition by Russian sculptor Vasily Klyukin. It represents a narrative that recreates the nine circles of hell, and includes over 100 multimedia elements, such as sculpture, installation, digital art, audio and light boxes. The exhibitions includes sculptural works, most of which represent negative human traits such as Anger, Gluttony and Betrayal.

“The most prominent sculptural pieces are the Four Horsemen of the Modern Apocalypse. The artist has translated the traditional Horsemen (plague, war, hunger and death) into a modern day version: Overpopulation, Misinformation, Extermination and Pollution.

[. . .]

“The immersive exhibition encourages visitors to examine the sculptures with an audio guide narrated in the style of Dante’s poems. The sculptures of human sins also portray the punishment that comes with the sin. For instance, Gluttony is incredibly obese and Temptation has no limbs.

“The exhibition also includes a ‘prison’ room, further embodying the topic of sin. Famous criminals such as Stalin, Pablo Escobar and Bokassa are imprisoned here. The prison has a dungeon room – Betrayal – which represents Hell. Visitors are encouraged to leave notes on the wall, allowing them to name people who have betrayed them, or to write a message of forgiveness.

“The exhibition ends on a positive note. The Heart of Hope is a large sculpture of a heart at the centre of the exhibition, which was also displayed at the Burning Man festival in 2017. It symbolises the ability to stop all the negative traits and sins. Visitors are given a bracelet which transmits a signal to the statue, which then beats in the rhythm of the bracelet wearer’s heartbeat.”    —Elucid Magazine

Categories: Image Mosaic, Visual Art & Architecture, Written Word
Tagged with: 2020, Art, Betrayal, Digital Arts, Gluttony, Hell, Hope, Inferno, Installation Art, Multimedia, Russia, Sculptures, Sins, Temptation

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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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