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Professors Cook and Herzman provide you with an illuminating introduction to one of the greatest works ever written. One of the most profound and satisfying of all poems, The Divine Comedy (or Commedia) of Dante Alighieri is a book for life. In a brilliantly constructed narrative of his imaginary guided pilgrimage through the three realms of the Christian afterlife, Dante accomplished a literary task of astonishing complexity. But the full achievement of the Commedia goes beyond anything merely literary. In these twenty-four lectures, as you follow Dante on his journey, you'll learn how medieval literature offers insights into fundamental questions: What is the quality of our moral actions? How does spiritual transformation come about? What is the nature of good and evil, virtue and vice, sin and sanctity? Why is the world so full of strife? How do we go on when we lose the things we love? You'll discover why, in the centuries since the Commedia was written, not one of these questions has lost its force. Moreover, you'll hear Dante address them in a demanding and innovative Italian verse form (terza rima) that makes the Commedia one of the great virtuoso pieces of world literature. With the guidance of these two master professors, you'll learn invaluable background information on Dante's life and times; why Dante wrote the Commedia; how to approach the various English editions available; and how each part of the poem is connected to what has come before. But above all, you'll understand why the Commedia is not a puzzle to be solved or a book to be read and put aside-but a mystery whose beauty and richness is to be constantly savored. All Lectures: 1. Reading the Poem - Issues and Editions 2. A Poet and His City - Dante's Florence 3. Literary Antecedents, I 4. Literary Antecedents, II 5. "Abandon Every Hope, All You Who Enter" 6. The Never-Ending Storm 7. Heretics 8. The Seventh Circle - The Violent 9. The Sin of Simony 10. The False Counselors 11. The Ultimate Evil 12. The Seven-Story Mountain 13. Purgatory's Waiting Room 14. The Sin of Pride 15. The Vision to Freedom 16. Homage to Virgil 17. Dante's New Guide 18. Ascending the Spheres 19. An Emperor Speaks 20. The Circle of the Sun - Saints and Sages 21. A Mission Revealed - Encounter with an Ancestor 22. Can a Pagan Be Saved? 23. Faith, Hope, Love, and the Mystic Empyrean 24. "In My End Is My Beginning".… (más)
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Wildly brilliant concept on Dante's part, and excellent analysis by Cook and Herzman. I had trouble staying focused during Purgatorio and Paradiso, having to go back and relisten multiple times. Might be just me, or maybe this is why Inferno is the most frequently studied book of the three. ( )
  ryner | Jul 17, 2023 |
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Herzman, Ronald B.Autorautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado

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Professors Cook and Herzman provide you with an illuminating introduction to one of the greatest works ever written. One of the most profound and satisfying of all poems, The Divine Comedy (or Commedia) of Dante Alighieri is a book for life. In a brilliantly constructed narrative of his imaginary guided pilgrimage through the three realms of the Christian afterlife, Dante accomplished a literary task of astonishing complexity. But the full achievement of the Commedia goes beyond anything merely literary. In these twenty-four lectures, as you follow Dante on his journey, you'll learn how medieval literature offers insights into fundamental questions: What is the quality of our moral actions? How does spiritual transformation come about? What is the nature of good and evil, virtue and vice, sin and sanctity? Why is the world so full of strife? How do we go on when we lose the things we love? You'll discover why, in the centuries since the Commedia was written, not one of these questions has lost its force. Moreover, you'll hear Dante address them in a demanding and innovative Italian verse form (terza rima) that makes the Commedia one of the great virtuoso pieces of world literature. With the guidance of these two master professors, you'll learn invaluable background information on Dante's life and times; why Dante wrote the Commedia; how to approach the various English editions available; and how each part of the poem is connected to what has come before. But above all, you'll understand why the Commedia is not a puzzle to be solved or a book to be read and put aside-but a mystery whose beauty and richness is to be constantly savored. All Lectures: 1. Reading the Poem - Issues and Editions 2. A Poet and His City - Dante's Florence 3. Literary Antecedents, I 4. Literary Antecedents, II 5. "Abandon Every Hope, All You Who Enter" 6. The Never-Ending Storm 7. Heretics 8. The Seventh Circle - The Violent 9. The Sin of Simony 10. The False Counselors 11. The Ultimate Evil 12. The Seven-Story Mountain 13. Purgatory's Waiting Room 14. The Sin of Pride 15. The Vision to Freedom 16. Homage to Virgil 17. Dante's New Guide 18. Ascending the Spheres 19. An Emperor Speaks 20. The Circle of the Sun - Saints and Sages 21. A Mission Revealed - Encounter with an Ancestor 22. Can a Pagan Be Saved? 23. Faith, Hope, Love, and the Mystic Empyrean 24. "In My End Is My Beginning".

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