Why should you read Dante’s “Divine Comedy”? - Sheila Marie Orfano
 “Abandon all hope, ye who enter here… ”
  Inscribed above the Gate of Hell,
  these ominous words warn dark 
 tidings for Dante
  as he begins his descent into inferno.
  Yet despite the grim tone,
  this prophecy sets into motion what is 
 perhaps the greatest love story ever told;
  an epic journey that encompasses both 
 the human and the divine.
  But for Dante to reach 
 benevolent salvation,
  he must first find his way through Hell.
  This landscape of torture is the setting 
 for "Inferno,"
  the first in a three-part narrative poem
  written by Dante Alighieri 
 in the 14th century.
  Casting himself as the protagonist,
  Dante travels deeper and deeper 
 into Hell’s abyss,
  witnessing obscene punishments distinct 
 to each of its nine realms.
  Beginning in Limbo, he travels through the
 circles of Lust, Gluttony, Greed, Wrath,
  Heresy, Violence, and Fraud,
  to the horrific ninth circle of Treachery,
  where sinners are trapped under the 
 watchful eyes of Satan himself.
  The following two parts, "Purgatorio" and 
 "Paradiso," continue Dante’s journey,
  as he scales the Mount of Purgatory
  and ascends the nine celestial 
 spheres of Heaven.
  Written together over 10 years, these 
 3 sections comprise the "Divine Comedy"–
  an allegorical imagining of the soul’s 
 journey towards God.
  But Dante’s "Divine Comedy" is more than 
 just religious allegory.
  It’s also a witty, scathing commentary on 
 Italian politics.
  A soldier and statesman from Florence, 
 Dante was staunchly faithful to God,
  but often critical of the 
 Roman Catholic Church.
  He particularly disliked its rampant 
 nepotism and practice of simony,
  the buying and selling of religious 
 favours such as pardons from sin.
  Many groups took advantage of these 
 corrupt customs,
  but few supported them as much as the 
 Guelfi Neri, or Black Guelphs.
  This was a political and religious faction
  which sought to expand the pope’s 
 political influence.
  Dante was a member of the Guelfi Bianchi, 
 or White Guelphs–
  who believed Florence needed more 
 freedom from Roman influence.
  As a public representative for the 
 White Guelphs,
  Dante frequently spoke out against 
 the pope’s power,
  until the Black Guelphs leveraged their
 position
  to exile him from Florence in 1302.
  But rather than silencing him,
  this lifelong exile led to Dante’s 
 greatest critique of all.
  Dishonored and with little hope of return,
  the author freely aired his grievances 
 with the Church and Italian society.
  Writing the "Divine Comedy" in Italian,
  rather than the traditional Latin of the 
 educated elite,
  Dante ensured the widest possible audience
 for his biting political commentary.
  In the "Inferno’s" circle of the Wrathful,
  Dante eagerly witnesses sinners
  tear Black Guelph Filippo 
 Argenti limb from limb.
  In the circle of Fraud,
  Dante converses with a mysterious sinner 
 burning in the circle’s hottest flames.
  He learns that this is Pope Nicholas III,
  who tells Dante that his two successors 
 will take his place when they die—
  all three guilty of simony and corruption.
  Despite the bleak and sometimes violent 
 imagery in "Inferno,"
  the "Divine Comedy" is also a love story.
  Though Dante had an arranged marriage
  with the daughter of a powerful 
 Florentine family,
  he had also been unrequitedly in love with
 another woman since he was nine years old:
  Beatrice Portinari.
  Despite allegedly meeting just twice, 
 she became Dante’s lifelong muse,
  serving as the inspiration and subject for
 many of his works.
  In fact, it’s Beatrice who launches his 
 intrepid journey into the pits of Hell
  and up the terraces of Mount Purgatory.
  Portrayed as a powerful, heavenly figure,
  she leads Dante through "Paradiso’s"
 concentric spheres of Heaven
  until he is finally face-to-face with God.
  In the centuries since its publication,
  the "Divine Comedy’s" themes of love, 
 sin, and redemption
  have been embraced by numerous artists–
  from Auguste Rodin and Salvador Dali, 
 to Ezra Pound and Neil Gaiman.
  And the poet himself received his own 
 belated, earthly redemption in 2008,
  when the city of Florence finally revoked 
 Dante’s antiquated exile.
 
divine comedy, dante, Dante Alighieri, inferno, purgatorio, paradiso, dantes inferno, virgil, hell, heaven, salvation, epic poem, poetry, ancient rome, abandon all hope, classics, classic literature, classic poetry, beatrice, purgatory, love, sin, redemption, allegory, political commentary, limbo, 9 circles of hell, roman catholic church, corruption, florence, pope, animation, education, sheila marie orfano, Tomás Pichardo-Espaillat, TED, TED-Ed, TED Ed, Teded, Ted Education
															 
												
Tại sao bạn nên đọc “Divine Comedy” của Dante?
Why should you read Dante’s “Divine Comedy”? - Sheila Marie Orfano
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