The undivine Comedy : detheologizing Dante
(1992)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Princeton University Press, 1992
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781400820764 (electronic bk.) MWT14806760, 1400820766 (electronic bk.) 14806760
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Accepting Dante's prophetic truth claims on their own terms, Teodolinda Barolini proposes a "detheologized" reading as a global new approach to the Divine Comedy. Not aimed at excising theological concerns from Dante, this approach instead attempts to break out of the hermeneutic guidelines that Dante structured into his poem and that have resulted in theologized readings whose outcomes have been overdetermined by the poet. By detheologizing, the reader can emerge from this poet's hall of mirrors and discover the narrative techniques that enabled Dante to forge a true fiction. Foregrounding the formal exigencies that Dante masked as ideology, Barolini moves from the problems of beginning to those of closure, focusing always on the narrative journey. Her investigation--which treats such topics as the visionary and the poet, the One and the many, narrative and time--reveals some of the transgressive paths trodden by a master of mimesis, some of the ways in which Dante's poetic adventuring is indeed, according to his own lights, Ulyssean

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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