Dante: Contemporary PerspectivesAmilcare A. Iannucci, Iannotius Manettus University of Toronto Press, 1997 M01 1 - 299 pages Dante: Contemporary Perspectivesgathers recent and newly commissioned articles on Dante Alighieri (1265-1321), whose epic the Divine Comedy, is one of the landmarks of world literature. The essays in this volume probe current critical assumptions about the celebrated Italian poet, literary theorist, moral philosopher, and political theorist. Dante's attitude towards poetic authority and language comes under scrutiny in several essays, while others examine his political thought and his views on women and gender. Several articles focus exclusively on the Divine Comedy, and, in particular, on its distinctive textual characteristics. There are new readings of two of the Divine Comedy'smost important episodes - those of Paolo and Francesca, the Earthly Paradise, and Ulysses- whose significance extends far beyond their immediate contexts. These essays bring into focus Dante's bold narrative innovations and reflections on literature and history. |
Contents
Dante and Medieval Poetics | 3 |
Palinode and History in the Oeuvre of Dante | 23 |
Dante and the Classics | 51 |
Biblical Citation in the Divine | 74 |
Metaphor and History Inferno | 94 |
Narrative and Transgression | 113 |
Narrative Design in Dantes Earthly Paradise | 133 |
Dante | 148 |
Dante and the Authority of Poetic Language | 167 |
Dante and Politics | 181 |
Dante and Androgyny | 195 |
Orality in the Reception of Dantes Comedy | 214 |
Interpreting the Commentary Tradition to the Comedy | 240 |
Readers Application and the Moment of Truth in Dantes | 259 |
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS | 281 |