Jamshyd
Bluelight Crew
I was made aware of the fact that I had, in my previous attempt at study in a university, ignored the fact that Dante Alighieri was practically thrown at me left and right by professors I admired whose subjects nevetheless didn't have much to do with Dante's works. They just loved the guy, and somehow I found myself in all of their classes. This means I learnt a good deal about the structure of his works, his influences, and who he influenced, yet the only work written by him that I had read back then - and only half-mindedly at the time - was some excerpt from
Di vulgari eloquentia. Hardly representative. That said, I had known of the structure of his comedia, the basic premise, and its mechanics.
Then I forgot all about him.
Yet recent events have rekindled that interest, or one can say: ever since I felt the direction of gravity shift in my life; here I am again reading about Dante once more, rather than his works themselves! As I await to obtain the appropriate translations as per several recommendations, I find myself in posession of his Vita Nuova. I decided to read it as a primer and I am so happy at this decision: it turns out The Poet and I have more in common than I thought: not in talent - not by far! ...but rather in the way we see life. I'd wager it is the fact that I have made allegory a way of life many years ago, and allegoresis was the norm in medieval spirituality as a method of reconciling Classical myth with Christian theology.
My questions to you, wiser souls who have any familairity with the Comedia:
1. What order would you recommend the books are read at? One girl who is in love with it says that one starts with the purgatorio, read the other two at any order, then go back to purgatorio. Another person I know recommended that I read them in the original order. My intuition tells me neither...
2. How do you feel this work has affected you personally, particularly in spiritual/philosophical life?
3. Any random advice, recommended side books (I am currently reading St. Bonaventure, to be followed by Augustine and Boethius, to be followed by others)?
4. Anything else that you might feel like saying
.
Di vulgari eloquentia. Hardly representative. That said, I had known of the structure of his comedia, the basic premise, and its mechanics.
Then I forgot all about him.
Yet recent events have rekindled that interest, or one can say: ever since I felt the direction of gravity shift in my life; here I am again reading about Dante once more, rather than his works themselves! As I await to obtain the appropriate translations as per several recommendations, I find myself in posession of his Vita Nuova. I decided to read it as a primer and I am so happy at this decision: it turns out The Poet and I have more in common than I thought: not in talent - not by far! ...but rather in the way we see life. I'd wager it is the fact that I have made allegory a way of life many years ago, and allegoresis was the norm in medieval spirituality as a method of reconciling Classical myth with Christian theology.
My questions to you, wiser souls who have any familairity with the Comedia:
1. What order would you recommend the books are read at? One girl who is in love with it says that one starts with the purgatorio, read the other two at any order, then go back to purgatorio. Another person I know recommended that I read them in the original order. My intuition tells me neither...
2. How do you feel this work has affected you personally, particularly in spiritual/philosophical life?
3. Any random advice, recommended side books (I am currently reading St. Bonaventure, to be followed by Augustine and Boethius, to be followed by others)?
4. Anything else that you might feel like saying
