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This week's episode begins a series of episodes on the extraordinary work composed at the outset of the fourteenth century by the great Italian poet Dante Alighieri. With his Christian understanding of the soul, Dante's epic poem is an imaginative and moral vision of this earthly life in the light of what will happen after death.
The narrative takes as its literal subject the state of souls after death and presents an image of divine justice meted out as due punishment or reward, and describes Dante's travels through Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise or Heaven, while allegorically the poem represents the soul's journey towards God, beginning with the recognition and rejection of sin (Inferno), followed by the penitent Christian life (Purgatorio), which is then followed by the soul's ascent to God (Paradiso).
The first episode is a general overview of the verbal architecture of the poem, looking at some of the many extraordinarily well-wrought poetics and its basic motifs. As a humanist, we will emphasize how different Dante's theological and philosophical premises are from a poet who believes that poetry is first and foremost a mode of self-expression rather than an engagement with ultimate reality.
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This week's episode begins a series of episodes on the extraordinary work composed at the outset of the fourteenth century by the great Italian poet Dante Alighieri. With his Christian understanding of the soul, Dante's epic poem is an imaginative and moral vision of this earthly life in the light of what will happen after death.
The narrative takes as its literal subject the state of souls after death and presents an image of divine justice meted out as due punishment or reward, and describes Dante's travels through Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise or Heaven, while allegorically the poem represents the soul's journey towards God, beginning with the recognition and rejection of sin (Inferno), followed by the penitent Christian life (Purgatorio), which is then followed by the soul's ascent to God (Paradiso).
The first episode is a general overview of the verbal architecture of the poem, looking at some of the many extraordinarily well-wrought poetics and its basic motifs. As a humanist, we will emphasize how different Dante's theological and philosophical premises are from a poet who believes that poetry is first and foremost a mode of self-expression rather than an engagement with ultimate reality.