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The Divine Comedy: Dante's Journey to Freedom

Offered By: Georgetown University via edX

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Poetry Courses Literature Courses Philosophy Courses Self-reflection Courses

Course Description

Overview

Learning to read poetry is learning to do the deep magic of language. It's learning to speak to the dead. At first the book just sits there silent as the grave, but if we listen carefully then, softly at first, the poetry begins to speak to us and we find ourselves speaking to it in response. Dante is the master of speaking with the dead. He convinces us that the dead can tell us things we do not know—things we cannot discover about the meaning of life because we are still in the middle of it. He shows us that conversations with the dead can change the way that we look at life. You and I may not have enough imagination to explore the realms of death that open up in the middle of life, and Dante knows that no one can find their way through life without a guide. This course will help you discover the magic of Dante's poetry and Dante will teach you to imagine the deepest terrors and the highest hopes that are still undiscovered in your heart. Only then will you be in a position to decide finally, for yourself, who you choose to become.

In this course, you will begin to question for yourself the meaning of human freedom, responsibility and identity by reading and responding to Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. The Comedy , which is richly steeped in the medieval culture of 14th century, still speaks vividly to modern readers struggling with the questions “who am I?” and “what meaning or value can my life have?” Dante struggled with the same questions before coming to a moment of vision that wholly transformed him as a person.

This course is presented to you through the MyDante platform, an online environment developed by Professor Frank Ambrosio in collaboration with the Georgetown University Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship (CNDLS). Throughout the course, you will be asked to reflect on Dante's interpretation of freedom, how it functions in the formation of personal identity, and whether we might be able to find appropriate metaphors to discuss these issues in our modern lives. You, the modern reader, will only understand the full implications of Dante's poetry if you participate with it in a way that is personal and genuinely contemplative. Through the MyDante platform, you will learn to know yourself in your own historical, personal, and spiritual contexts as you journey toward a richer understanding of your freedom, identity, and responsibility as a person.


Syllabus

  • Introduction to the Course and Course/Inferno Themes
  • Book1: Vita Nuova

    • Chapters 1-19
    • Chapters 20-42
    • Book2: Inferno
    • Canti 1-4
    • Canti 5-10
    • Canti 11-16
    • Canti 17-23
    • Canti 24-30
    • Canti 31-34
    • Book 3: Purgatorio
    • Introduction toPurgatorioThemes
    • Canti 1-6
    • Canti 7-12
    • Canti 13-18
    • Canti 19-24
    • Canti 25-29
    • Canti 30-33
    • Book 4: Paradiso
    • Introduction to Paradiso Themes
    • Canti 1-5
    • Canti 6-12
    • Canti 13-17
    • Canti 18-23
    • Canti 24-29
    • Canti 30-33

Taught by

Frank Ambrosio

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