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The Inferno, Part I

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The city-state of Florence, Italy, had 2 political groups, the Blacks and the ... Canto 8: Circle 5, Styx, the Wrathful, Phlegyas, Circle 6: Dis, the Fallen Angels. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Inferno, Part I


1
The Inferno, Part I
  • CNE/ENG 120
  • 11/10/04

2
The Inferno
  • Author Dante Alighieri
  • Culture Italian
  • Time early 14th c. CE
  • Genre commedia (a poetic form with both high and
    low registers)
  • supreme representation of the medieval mind in
    European imaginative lit.
  • Names to know Paolo Francesca

3
Historical Context
  • The city-state of Florence, Italy, had 2
    political groups, the Blacks and the Whites
    (Dantes group).
  • 1302 The Blacks seized power, exiling the
    Whites. Dante was banished from Florence on pain
    of death.
  • Convicted in absentia on the trumped up charge
    that he had misused funds when he held office
    (the sin of graft, see Circle 8, Bolga 5).

4
Dantes House in Florence
5
Reaction to Changed Circumstances
  • Dante wrote his Divine Comedy in exile, finishing
    it shortly before his death in 1321.
  • His first love (courtly), Beatrice Portinari
    (1266-1290), appears in the DC as a heavenly
    guide whose name signifies blessedness or
    salvation. She stands for Divine Love.

6
3 Medieval World Views
  • Anthropocentric (Genesis)
  • Mechanistic (universe is a machine, hence the
    numerology)
  • Teleological (everything is Gods plan)
  • All 3 are systematically challenged in the
    Enlightenment.

7
Structure
  • Highly wrought. Three main divisions,
    corresponding to the Trinity (3 is a sacred
    number)
  • Hell (shows us those who put something before
    God)
  • Purgatory (shows us those seeking to be good)
  • Paradise (shows us those enjoying the good)
  • All these are identical in length.
  • Opening canto (prologue to entire work), then 33
    cantos for each division, totaling 100, the
    square of 10, a perfect number.

8
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9
Terza Rima
  • Dante created this poetic structure, in which the
    lines rhyme as follows
  • aba bcb cdc
  • This forms a group of 3 lines interlocked by a
    repeated rhyme word. This is his verbal
    equivalent of the 3-in-1 Trinity.
  • Each line contains 11 syllables so the 3 lines
    33 syllables, the same as the cantos in each
    main narrative division.

10
Another Structural Pattern
  • Each division (Inferno, Purgatory, Paradise) ends
    with the same word, stelle (stars) - which are
    the visible signs of Gods oversight.
  • Inferno 9 circles contain 3 types of sinners.
  • Purgatory Ante-Purgatory, 7 terraces, then
    Earthly Paradise (9 total).
  • Paradise 9 embedded spheres beyond which lies
    the Trinity.

11
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12
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13
The Inferno (Hell)
  • Lost souls are in 3 main groups and occupy 9
    circles (see p.1076).
  • The idea of eternal punishment follows Christian
    doctrine of the time.
  • Dantes journey takes him down the 9 concentric
    circles, from the least sins to the greatest
    types of evil.

14
Ante-Hell
  • The abode of those who refused to choose between
    right and wrong moral neutrals.
  • For this relatively small sin, they are punished
    by small annoyances (insects and such).

15
Inferno Organization
  • Boundary river between the Ante-Hell and Limbo
    (circle of virtuous pagans who did not know
    Christ) is Acheron (a classical reference a
    river in Hades, the Greek underworld).

16
The Three Great Sins
  • Circles of those guilty of Self-Indulgence
    (illicit lovers, gluttons, hoarders and
    spendthrifts, those of violent or sullen
    dispositions)
  • Circles of those guilty of Violence
  • Circles of those guilty of Fraud (treachery,
    treason)
  • Bottom Lucifer/Satan.

17
Punishment
  • As befits a mechanistic worldview, the punishment
    fits the crime - in fact, it IS the crime.
  • Sinners are doomed to the endless act of sinning.

18
Roman History and Literature
  • To Dante, a Medieval Italian, the Roman empire
    had been divinely ordained Christ first came in
    the reign of Augustus.
  • He wants to recreate the empire (a united Italy)
    for the second coming.
  • Caesars assassins disobeyed divine will, and so
    earned their place in Satans mouths.
  • Dante works with both the classical and Christian
    traditions.

19
Canto 1
  • Unlike epic poetry, the Commedia begins with
    action, not a proem. Explanations occur as we go
    along.
  • Main character and narrator Dante, a wandering
    hero and a pilgrim. A hero going to the
    underworld is a staple of Greco-Roman epic
    (Odysseus, Aeneas) as well as of Christian
    theology (Christ harrowing Hell).

20
  • The Inferno is an account of the effect of a
    journey on the man who takes it - a record of
    moral and spiritual experience of illumination,
    regeneration, beatitude (in this, it is a bit
    like Augustines works).
  • The narrative is both literal and allegorical
    (full of symbols).

21
The Dark Wood of Error
  • Canto 1 the narrator tells us that he was 35
    years old, he became lost in a wood,
    threatened by three beasts - the She-Wolf
    (self-indulgence), the Lion (violence), and the
    Leopard (Fraud).

22
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24
Significant Dates
  • The action of the poem takes place over Easter
    weekend of 1300 CE.
  • Entry into the Dark Wood night of Maundy
    Thursday
  • Descent to Hell Good Friday
  • Purgatory Sunrise of Easter Sunday
  • The Timeline is just like that of Jesuss
    experience.

25
Guide
  • Whereas Augustine presented Cicero as his guide
    towards God, Dante has the Roman poet Vergil
    offer to be his guide, sent at Beatrices
    request.
  • Hell is full not just of bad people, but full
    also of the charming, noble, great - they are all
    there because they preferred something else to
    God.

26
Inscription on Hells Gate (Canto 3)
  • Through me the way into the suffering city,
  • Through me the way to the eternal pain,
  • Through me the way that runs among the lost,
  • Justice urged on my high artificer
  • My maker was divine authority,
  • The highest wisdom, and the primal love.
  • Before me nothing but eternal things were made,
  • And I endure eternally.
  • Abandon every hope, who enter here.

27
Cantos 2-5
  • Canto 5 Circle 2, the Carnal. People who loved
    not wisely but too well other people, food,
    material goods, their own aggressive impulses
    (anger, etc.). These harmed themselves, not
    others.
  • Canto 2 Dante and Vergil descend into the
    Inferno.
  • Canto 3 The Vestibule of Hell the Opportunists.
  • Canto 4 Limbo (pagans not punished, just
    hopeless)

28
Dante Meets Homer Other Great Classical Poets
(Canto 4)
29
Canto 5 Paolo Francesca
30
Paolo Francesca
  • These are the best-known figures in the Divine
    Comedy. They represent sinful love were
    corrupted by reading Arthurian tales. Francescas
    husband, the brother of Paolo, killed them.
  • Their example shows how a noble emotion, if
    contrary to Gods Law, can bring 2 good people to
    ruin. Paolo Francesca have their love, but they
    have lost God.

31
Amos Cassioli
32
Gustave Dore
33
Anselm Fuerbach
34
Ingres
35
Ary Scheffer
36
Cantos 6-10
  • Canto 6 Circle 3, the Gluttons.
  • Canto 7 Circle 4, the Hoarders Wasters Circle
    5, the Wrathful Sullen
  • Canto 8 Circle 5, Styx, the Wrathful, Phlegyas,
    Circle 6 Dis, the Fallen Angels.
  • Canto 9 Circle 6, the Heretics.
  • Canto 10 Circle 6, within the walled city of
    Dis. This circle is a kind of border between the
    upper Hell (Incontinence) lower
    (Violence/Fraud).

37
Cantos 11-14
  • Canto 11 Circle 6, Heretics, continued.
  • Canto 12 Circle 7, round 1 the violent against
    neighbors.
  • Canto 13 Circle 7, round 2 Wood of the Suicides.
  • Sinner Pier delle Vigne (a man who had every
    reason to want to end his life). This is one of
    the great examples of landscape adapted to theme.
  • Canto 14 Circle 7, round 3 the violent against
    God, Nature, Art.

38
Botticelli Wood of the Suicides
39
Dore Harpies the Suicides
40
Canto 15 Violent Against Nature
  • Brunetto Latini grabs his friend Dante they
    talk. He had been Dantes teacher and advisor.
    His sin homosexuality.

41
Cantos 16-18
  • Canto 16 Circle 7, round 3, the violent against
    nature and art.
  • Canto 17 Circle 7, round 3 the violent against
    art.
  • The travelers are carried on Geryons back down
    the deep drop to the 8th Circle.
  • Geryon symbolizes Fraud.
  • 8th Circle Malebolge, which is subdivided into
    10 trenches.
  • Canto 18 Circle 8. The fraudulent malicious.
    Bolgia 1 panderers seducers.

42
Botticelli Panderers Seducers
43
Cantos 18-23
  • Bolgia 2 the flatterers.
  • Canto 19 Circle 8, Bolgia 3 the Simoniacs
    (sellers of church offices favors).
  • Canto 20 Circle 8, Bolgia 4 the fortune tellers
    diviners.
  • Cantos 21-22 Circle 8, Bolgia 5, probably has
    biographical relevance to Dante - the grafters.
  • Canto 23 Circle 8, Bolgia 6, the hypocrites.

44
Botticelli Canto 19
45
Botticelli Canto 23
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