In Dante's Wake: Reading from Medieval to Modern in the Augustinian Tradition

In Dante's Wake: Reading from Medieval to Modern in the Augustinian Tradition

In Dante's Wake: Reading from Medieval to Modern in the Augustinian Tradition

In Dante's Wake: Reading from Medieval to Modern in the Augustinian Tradition

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Overview

Waking to find himself shipwrecked on a strange shore before a dark wood, the pilgrim of the Divine Comedy realizes he must set his sights higher and guide his ship to a radically different port. Starting on the sand of that very shore with Dante, John Freccero begins retracing the famous voyage recounted by the poet nearly 700 years ago.

Freccero follows pilgrim and poet through the Comedy and then beyond, inviting readers both uninitiated and accomplished to join him in navigating this complex medieval masterpiece and its influence on later literature. Perfectly impenetrable in its poetry and unabashedly ambitious in its content, the Divine Comedy is the cosmos collapsed on itself, heavy with dense matter and impossible to expand. Yet Dante's great triumph is seen in the tiny, subtle fragments that make up the seamless whole, pieces that the poet painstakingly sewed together to form a work that insinuates itself into the reader and inspires the work of the next author. Freccero magnifies the most infinitesimal elements of that intricate construction to identify self-similar parts, revealing the full breadth of the great poem.

Using this same technique, Freccero then turns to later giants of literature- Petrarch, Machiavelli, Donne, Joyce, and Svevo-demonstrating how these authors absorbed these smallest parts and reproduced Dante in their own work. In the process, he confronts questions of faith, friendship, gender, politics, poetry, and sexuality, so that traveling with Freccero, the reader will both cross unknown territory and reimagine familiar faces, swimming always in Dante's wake.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780823264285
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 09/01/2015
Pages: 286
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

John Freccero is Professor of Italian and Comparative Literature at New York University. He is the author of Dante: The Poetics of Conversion, edited by Rachel Jacoff.

Danielle Callegari received her Ph.D. in Italian Studies from New York University.

Melissa Swain is a Ph.D. candidate in Italian Studies at New York University.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Editors' introduction
List of Figures

Shipwreck in the Prologue
The Portrait of Francesca: Inferno 5
Epitaph for Guido
The Eternal Image of the Father
Allegory and Autobiography
In the Wake of the Argo on a Boundless Sea
The Fig Tree and the Laurel
Medusa and the Madonna of Forlì: Political Sexuality in Machiavelli
Donne's Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
Zeno's Last Cigarette

Bibliography
Index
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