Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Life of Dante
- 2 Dante and the lyric past
- 3 Approaching the Vita nuova
- 4 From auctor to author: Dante before the Commedia
- 5 Introduction to Inferno
- 6 Introduction to Purgatorio
- 7 Introduction to Paradiso
- 8 Dante and the Bible
- 9 Dante and the classical poets
- 10 Allegory and autobiography
- 11 A poetics of chaos and harmony
- 12 The theology of the Comedy
- 13 The poetry and poetics of the creation
- 14 Dante and Florence
- 15 Dante and the empire
- 16 Dante and his commentators
- 17 Dante in English
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
1 - Life of Dante
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2007
- Frontmatter
- 1 Life of Dante
- 2 Dante and the lyric past
- 3 Approaching the Vita nuova
- 4 From auctor to author: Dante before the Commedia
- 5 Introduction to Inferno
- 6 Introduction to Purgatorio
- 7 Introduction to Paradiso
- 8 Dante and the Bible
- 9 Dante and the classical poets
- 10 Allegory and autobiography
- 11 A poetics of chaos and harmony
- 12 The theology of the Comedy
- 13 The poetry and poetics of the creation
- 14 Dante and Florence
- 15 Dante and the empire
- 16 Dante and his commentators
- 17 Dante in English
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
The life of Dante is such a tangle of public and private passions and ordeals experienced over the fifty-six years he lived that it has always been a source of inexhaustible fascination. It is as if everything about his life - its innumerable defeats and its occasional and yet enduring triumphs - belongs to the romantic and alluring realm of legend: a love at first sight that was to last his whole life and inspire lofty poetry; the long, cruel exile from his native Florence because of the civil war ravaging the city; the poem he wrote, the Divina Commedia, made of his public and private memories; the turning of himself into an archetypal literary character, such as Ulysses, Faust, or any of those medieval knights errant, journeying over the tortuous paths of a spiritual quest, wrestling with dark powers, and, finally, seeing God face to face.
Many are the reasons why generations of readers have found the story of Dante's life compelling. His relentless self-invention as an unbending prophet of justice and a mythical quester for the divine is certainly one important reason. The fact that in his graphic figurations of the beyond (rare glimpses of which were available in only a few other legendary mythmakers - Homer, Plato, and Virgil) he was an unparalleled poet also greatly heightens our interest in him. Yet none of these reasons truly accounts for what must be called - given the extraordinary number of biographies Dante has elicited over the centuries - the literary phenomenon of “The Life of Dante.”
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- The Cambridge Companion to Dante , pp. 1 - 13Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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