Unit 5, Lecture 3: Fires of Dis to Ice of Cocytus.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Visual Depiction of Dante’s Inferno
Advertisements

Canto 11 Alivia Stewart English 230 May 4, Summary Canto 11 begins with Dante and Virgil at the edge of the 7 th circle of hell. They must pause.
By: Michael Jaramillo. Introduction Written by Dante Alighieri in Dante’s Inferno is the first part of The Divine Comedy. There are three parts.
Canto 32 Alexandra Poche November 20, Summary and Main Points The First Two Rings of the Ninth Circle of Hell; Also Known as Treachery. Caina and.
Dante’s Inferno.
Round 2, Antenora: Named for the Trojan prince Antenor. He plots with the Greeks to destroy the city. Round 3, Ptolomea: Named for the Ptolomaeus of Maccabees,
The Divine Comedy: “INFERNO” 11/20/2007Christopher A. Pugh.
Oh You Possessed of Sturdy Intellects, observe the teaching that is hidden here/Beneath the veil of verses so obscure.
Dante’s Inferno The Details of Hell.
Dante’s Inferno By: Dante AlighieriDante Alighieri.
D ANTE ’ S I NFERNO The Circles of Hell. A CTIVATOR : P ERSONAL C ONNECTION INSTRUCTIONS: You have received nine post-it notes that you should number.
Post Reading Discussion
Heaven & Hell. Egypt ‘Harrowing of Hell’ Chora Church, Istanbul, ~ th c. manuscript.
DANTE’S INFERNO THE JOURNEY INTO HELL Drew Zailik Class of 2007 This presentation is intended for a student to have a fun and colorful journey through.
The Divine Comedy describes Dante's journey through Hell (Inferno), Purgatory (Purgatorio), and Paradise (Paradiso), guided first by the Roman poet Virgil.
Dante’s Inferno. The Dark Wood of Error The encounter with the three beasts.
Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 26: Thieves / Fraudulent Counselors.
Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 34 Canto 25  Ninth Circle, Fourth Ring: Judecca  Traitors against benefactors are being punished  Cold and ice.
Archetypes Canto I Canto IIICanto V Canto XXXIV.
Dante’s Divine Comedy One of the Best Poems of European Literature.
The Divine Comedy Dante’s Inferno By: Dante Alighieri By: Brittany Donaldson.
Dante Alighieri and his greatest work Divine Comedy.
Circle1- Limbo. Dante’s First Circle of Hell is resided by virtuous non-Christians and unbaptized pagans who are punished with eternity in an inferior.
“The Coming of the Glad and Lovely Eyes”: The Figure of Beatrice in Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise.
Dante’s Inferno Canto 9 Complied by: Rachel Cedor for English 230 Fall 2007.
The Inferno Dante Alighieri. Dante: Poet  Exiled from Florence  White Guelph  1265 – 1321  Places enemies in hell  Politicians  Poets (Ovid, Lucan)
Dante Alighieri His life and his work: The Divine Comedy. Inferno (Student example)
Dante’s Inferno By Dante Alighieri. Dante Alighieri World’s greatest poet of ideas Born in Florence, grew up in beginning of the Renaissance Exiled for.
1 st Ring: Limbo ► Luke Warm. Neither sinned nor believed in Christ. ► Heaven does not claim them, Hell does not want them.
Dante Alighieri’s Inferno home!index storyboard.
Dante Alighieri The Inferno.
English 12 - Mr. Rinka Lesson #3 Dante’s Inferno.
Dante Alighieri The Divine Comedy. Biography of Dante Born in Florence, Italy, in 1265 Exiled from Florence in 1300 –Political party was overthrown –Civil.
Canto XXVI By Abbi Carlson and Ainsley Klug 8 th circle, 8 th pouch. Fraudulent counselors. “Men of Gift who abused their Genius” (de Vere)
Canto I: The Dark Wood. Good Friday. 3 Beasts of Worldliness.
Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.
Dante Alighieri:  An Italian from Florence—Dante advocated for less papal control/ more of a separation of church and state  Pope/Catholic.
Dante’s Inferno An exciting journey through all the circles of Hell.
God and You “But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who.
Canto IV Circle 1: Limbo The Virtuous Pagans. Once across the Acheron river, Dante perceives Hell to be in a funnel shape, with the bottom at the Earth’s.
Dante Alighieri and The Divine Comedy. Dante was an Italian poet during the Middle Ages. He wrote a large poem called The Divine Comedy, a masterpiece.
{ The Inferno Dante Alighieri. Dark Wood of Error  What is the allegory of the wood?  Upon waking, Dante tried to run where?  Who stopped him?  Who.
Dante’s Inferno.
Gustave Dore’s Wood Etchings
Canto XXXIV Joshua Malone November 20, Journey toward the 9 th Circle of Hell, the 4 th ring Dante notices sinners completely covered with ice under.
Antithesis: a person or thing that is the direct opposite of someone or something else. Who and what are the antitheses of God and heaven? The Devil and.
Dante Alighieri The Inferno. The Inferno is an Allegory It is meant to be understood on two levels 1. Literal – actual progress through the.
DANTE’S INFERNO THE JOURNEY INTO HELL Dante and his guide Virgil.
Canto XXXIV The Ninth & Final Circle of Hell Summary of the Canto The poet reach the final round of the last circle of Cocytus, the ninth and final circle.
What the Inferno? Burning Questions about Dante’s Hell.
Moving Through the Circles of Dante’s Inferno. “In the midway of this our mortal life, I found me in a gloomy wood, astray.” -Canto I, lines 1,2.
Day 30: Dante’s Inferno and Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
The Divine Comedy Dante Alighieri.
Inferno Key Terms/Concepts
Gustave Dore’s Wood Etchings
The Inferno by Dante Alighieri.
Circle 9 Dante’s Inferno.
Dante’s Inferno The Details of Hell.
Canto 33 This Canto takes place in the Ninth Circle and Third Division of hell,before Dante is to meet Satan himself. He comes across a few characters.
Cantos I-II Three Beasts, William Blake Dark Wood, Gustave Doré.
 As the poet T. S. Eliot wrote, “Dante and Shakespeare divide the world between them, there is no third.”
 As the poet T. S. Eliot wrote, “Dante and Shakespeare divide the world between them, there is no third.”
1st Ring: Limbo Luke Warm. Neither sinned nor believed in Christ.
An exciting journey through all the circles of Hell
“Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch’intrate
Dante’s Inferno: THE NINTH CIRCLE OF HELL
Canto 33 April Sapia 11/20/07.
Presentation transcript:

Unit 5, Lecture 3: Fires of Dis to Ice of Cocytus

To the City of Dis Cantos v-viii: Virgil guides Dante through the circles of the gluttonous, the misers & spendthrifts, and across the river Styx where the wrathful and sullen are immersed Canto IX: Despair and the outskirts of Dis –Literal Story: Refused entrance and mocked by the harpies on the wall Virgil covers up his eyes against the appearance of Medusa The poet then calls attention to an allegorical meaning: –O you possessed of sturdy intellects/Observe the teaching that is hidden here/beneath the veil of verses so obscure.” –Allegorical Meaning (Norton 1297) The greatest sin for Medieval Christendom is “stony-heartedness.” This hard impenitent heart is created by despair-that one is beyond forgiveness (the condition of those in hell) Medusa stands for the hardening, petrifying effect of this despair.

Dis=Lower Hell: Violence and Fraud The violent against truth (Heresy) –Literal Story Farinata degli Uberti’s mighty pride: “as if he had tremendous scorn for hell” Pride underlines by use of words such as “scorn,” “disdain” and actions such as ignoring his fellow heretic, Cavalcante de Calvalcanti (fr. of Dante’s best friend) –Allegorical meaning: Intellectual pride and scorn of others may spring from same root.

Transition to Lower Hell (1): the Violent Proper (Cantos xii-xvii) 7 th -”three ring circle” for the violent—against neighbor, against self, and against God. Violent against self (xiii). –Literal Story: The Suicide Woods and Pier della Vigna: “We once were men and now are arid stumps” (xiii.37) His “disdainful flight” from undeserved dishonor though death His description of the last judgment: the bodies will hang from the “stump” –allegorical Meaning Suicide as a form of sterility: instead of producing the fruit of the vine: Pier della Vigna produces the blood of death The state of the suicide is less a punishment of sin than a revelation of the sin. The eternal separation of soul and the rejected body is simply the expression of the suicide’s decision. Violent against God: nature –Literal Story: Dante’s unforgettable encounter with Brunetto Latini who “taught me how man makes himself eternal” (85) –Allegorical meaning:

Transition to Lower Hell (1)” the Violent Proper (Cantos xii-xvii) A Gustave Dore painting

Lower Hell 2: Fraud: Brief Notes on xviii-xxix 8 th circle begins another division: that of “simple” fraud and is divided into 10 “pouches” Cantos xxi-xxii are called the “gargoyle” cantos because they are like the grotesque gargoyles in a cathedral In Canto xxiv-xxv, we see a kind of ongoing “identity theft” as thieves-turned-snakes steal back their human form from other thieves who, in turn, are transformed into serpents. A remarkable encounter with Ulysses in the 7 th pouch of “fraudulent counselors”’ notice as with Ser Brunetto Latini, we have again the paradox of the “inspiring” sinner as we focus on Odysseus’s last voyage: –Consider well the seed that gave you birth: You were not made to live your lives as brutes, But to be followers of worth and knowledge (xxvi.120)

Lower Hell (2): Fraud: Brief Notes on xvii-xxix Paintings

“Hell Freezing Over” Cantos xxxi- xxxiv To take a line from Robert Frost, Dante’s Inferno ends not in “fire” but in “ice.” In the frozen river of Cocytus, traitors arranged in a kind of “descending order of coldness” –Caina (after “Cain”): traitors to kin are immersed halfway in ice; heads bent down (xxxii) –Antenora (after Trojan traitor): traitors to homeland or party (xxxii-xxxiii) –Ptolomea (after Ptolomy): Traitors to guests buried with eyes facing up and tears frozen (xxxiii) –Judecca (after Judas): containing those who betrayed masters Literal Story: –Count Ugolino chewing the head of archbishop Ruggieri –A traitor recites a pathos-laden story of his own betrayal and watching the death of children and grandchildren Gaddo, throwing himself, outstretched down at my feet/implored me: “Father why do you not help me?” and there he died... (xxxiii 67-71) –Satan as three-headed monster, chewing three sinners. (Cassius, Brutus, and Judas—note, again, this latest [and most grotesque] coming together of classical and Christian culture) His wings freeze hell

Yep Hell did freeze over!

Allegorical Significance of Cocytus Note that images of “devouring” and “coldness” dominate the final cantos. Satan as a parody of the creative love of the Trinity. –Just as the “warmth” of God made the world, the beating of wings freezes it. –His 3 “slavering” and devouring heads parody the 3 “giving” persons of the Trinity Frozen tears of frustrated self-will as parody of “warm” tears of honest repentance As in Augustine, wrongdoing is viewed as a “perverse imitation” of God This full “unmasking” of evil becomes the means and motive for seeking redemption, as Virgil and Dante “climb” Satan’s legs to seek the redeeming pains of purgatory.