1st Edition

Dante's Enigmas Medieval Scholasticism and Beyond

By Richard Kay Copyright 2006
    352 Pages
    by Routledge

    Dante's Comedy is a puzzling poem because the author wanted to lead his readers to understanding by engaging their curiosity. While many obscure matters are clarified in the course of the poem itself, others have remained enigmas that have fascinated Dantists for centuries. Over the last thirty-five years, Richard Kay has proposed original solutions to many of these puzzles; these are collected in the present volume. Historical context frames Kay's readings, which relate the poem to such standard sources as the Bible, Aristotle, Aquinas, and the Latin classics, but he also goes beyond these Scholastic sources to exploit Dante's use of less familiar aspects of Latin clerical culture, including physiognomy, Vitruvian proportions, and optics, and most especially astrology. Kay explores new ways to read the Comedy. For instance, he argues that Dante has embedded references to his authorities in a continuous series of acrostics formed by the initial letters of each tercet. Again, he shows how Dante returns to the theme of each infernal canto and develops it in the parallel cantos of Purgatorio and Paradiso. Particularly worthy of note are four essays on the poem's finale in the Empyrean.

    Contents: Preface; Rucco di Cambio de' Mozzi in France and England; The sin(s) of Brunetto Latini; The Pope's wife: allegory as allegation in Inferno 19.106-111; Dante's double damnation of Manto; The spare ribs of Dante's Michael Scot; Two pairs of tricks: Ulysses and Guido in Dante's Inferno XXVI-XXVII; Vitruvius and Dante's giants; Dante's razor and Gratian's D. XV; Dante's prophecy of peripety (Par. 27.142-148): an astrological fortuna; Unwintering January (Dante, Paradiso 27.142-143); Dante's empyrean and the eye of God; Vitruvius and Dante's Imago dei; Dante in ecstasy: Paradiso 33 and Bernard of Clairvaux; Flash or effulgence? Mental illumination in Dante's Paradiso 33.141; Parallel cantos in Dante's Commedia; Dante's acrostic allegations: Inferno XI-XII ; Dante's acrostic allegations: Inferno XI; Dante's acrostic allegations: Inferno XII; An acrostic allegation in Dante's Vita nuova; Il giorno della nascita di Dante e la dipartita di Beatrice; Indexes.

    Biography

    Richard Kay is Emeritus Professor in the Department of History, University of Kansas, USA