The Modern Scholar: Dante and His Divine Comedy: The Modern Scholar by Professor Timothy B. Shutt, Recorded Books
English | August 14, 2008 | ISBN: B001EBHFCU | 8 hours and 26 minutes | MP3 64 Kbps | 236 Mb
English | August 14, 2008 | ISBN: B001EBHFCU | 8 hours and 26 minutes | MP3 64 Kbps | 236 Mb
Kenyon College professor Dr. Timothy B. Shutt examines Dante's greatest work, The Divine Comedy, both in terms of its autobiographical elements and its allegorical meaning for the human race.
By near universal agreement, Dante’s Divine Comedy stands very high among the greatest literary works ever written. The Commedia is about the afterlife, not just Hell, but Purgatory, and Heaven too. Dante’s genius is the genius of the allegorical method. In talking about his journey through Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven, Dante is talking about the whole course of human life. The Commedia is an account of Dante’s own salvation. He had lost his way and he may have lost his faith. The Commedia chronicles how he got out. He is talking not just about himself, but about everybody, about all Christian history, and about non-Christian history as well. In talking about his salvation, he is talking about the salvation of his readers too.
All things considered, Dante is, by the most skeptical judgment, one of the greatest poets who has ever lived. And this is a revealing study of his greatest work.
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