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Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

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Nabil Boutros, Liberty (2013)

April 28, 2022 By Sephora Affa, FSU '24

visual-poetry-nabil-boutros-liberty-if-desire

“The words that Virgil speaks to Cato (De Monarchia II, V, 15) mark both the origin and the end of the quest undertaken by Dante, at the end of the quest undertaken by Dante, at the end of which he poses a clear antithesis between ‘servitude’ and ‘liberty’: ‘Thou from a slave hast brought me unto freedom’ (Paradiso, Canto XXXI, 85).

[. . .] In this process of discernment through which freedom is achieved, man is supported by will, i.e. ‘the power that wills’ (Purgatorio, Canto XXI, 105), and aided by reason, i.e. ‘the power that counsels’ (Purgatorio, Canto XVIII, 62).”

Retrieved from The Divine Comedy: Heaven, Purgatory, and Hell Revisited by Contemporary African Artists by Simon Njami.

Learn more about the Cairo-born artist Nabil Boutros on the artist’s website.

Categories: Visual Art & Architecture, Written Word
Tagged with: 2013, Africa, Art Books, Cairo, Cato, Desire, Egypt, Freedom, Liberty, Paradiso, Prose, Purgatorio, Virgil

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

“Re-telling A Classic – Unravelling Archaic Prose for Contemporary Readers”

November 13, 2020 By Jasmine George, FSU '24

“Classics endure primarily because their stories explore topics and themes which continue to resonate; think Shakespeare, Tolstoy and Austen. And Dante. But what happens when classics, written in the style and cadence of ancient prose, simply don’t appeal to a contemporary audience thirsty for the story today yet unwilling – or unable – to untangle the archaic language of yesterday?

“Translations can be equally confusing, especially given they are often straight conversions from, in Dante’s case, 14th century Italian prose into 14th century English prose. Yet these classics deserve to live on. They are ripe for rediscovery and should not be abandoned purely because of a reluctance to decode archaic text. Still, it seems, the modern reader is prepared to reject certain bygone classics for that very reason, despite consensus they are considered pivotal pieces of literature; that they are art in themselves.

“So, how then, is today’s bookworm to enjoy classics such as The Divine Comedy without the immediate distraction of deciphering the archaic prose, or constantly referencing a pile of study guides, essays and tutors’ notes? Well, let me tell you…” –Alex L Moretti, Alex L Moretti, 2020

Read the full article here.

See our post on Moretti’s novelization of The Inferno here.

Categories: Image Mosaic, Written Word
Tagged with: 2020, Alex L Moretti, Classics, Contemporary Prose, Language, Literature, Prose

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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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