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  1. 6 days ago · In this sense, Dante is the great poet of existential crisis, 600 years before the word “existentialist” was coined. Think again of those opening lines. Dante has not drawn them from his imagination only.

  2. Nov 25, 2023 · John Took’s Why Dante Matters: An Intelligent Reader’s Guide reads what the author characterizes as Dante’s great works—of his early, middle, and late career—as existential accounts of the “agony and ecstasy of human journeying” under the conditions of time and space (1).

  3. DANTE needs no rehabilitation in the pantheon of world poetry. He is already there since long and in good company with Shakespeare and Goethe. T.S. Eliot, himself a great modern poet and critic who did more than any single writer in recent times to make the West Dante-conscious, affirmed in 1944 that 'in the Divine Comedy,

  4. Entitled Opinions host and guest discuss the great poem’s background, the spiritual crisis that gave birth to it, the mysterious role of Virgil as Dante’s guide, and the role of women in the drama (both as mediators to Dante’s spiritual climb, and as sexual sinners in the Inferno).

  5. Sep 28, 2021 · Both in this translation and in his afterword, Black shows us why Dante matters, and how, 700 years after his death, he can still help us to understand what may give meaning to our own lives.

  6. This is because Took approaches Dante as the supreme poetic existentialist of scholasticism, quoting Paul Tillich when he writes that Dante “gives in poetic symbols an all-embracing existential doctrine of man”.

  7. Aug 20, 2024 · The Divine Comedy is a long narrative poem written in Italian by Dante circa 1308–21. It consists of three sections: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. The poem traces the journey of Dante from darkness and error to the revelation of the divine light, culminating in the Beatific Vision of God.

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