This first volume of Robert Durling's new translation of The Divine Comedy brings a new power and accuracy to the rendering of Dante's extraordinary vision of Hell, with all its terror, pathos, and humor. Remarkably true to both the letter and spirit of this central work of Western literature, Durling's is a prose translation (the first to appear in twenty-five years), and is thus free of the exigencies of meter and rhyme that hamper recent verse translations. As Durling notes, "the closely literal style is a conscious effort to convey in part the nature of Dante's Italian, notoriously craggy and difficult even for Italians." Rigorously accurate as to meaning, it is both clear and supple, while preserving to an unparalleled degree the order and emphases of Dante's complex syntax.The Durling-Martinez Inferno is also user-friendly. The Italian text, newly edited, is printed on each verso page; the English mirrors it in such a way that readers can easily find themselves in relation to the original terza rima. Designed with the first-time reader of Dante in mind, the volume includes comprehensive notes and textual commentary by Martinez and Durling: both are life-long students of Dante and other medieval writers (their Purgatorio and Paradiso will appear next year). Their introduction is a small masterpiece of its kind in presenting lucidly and concisely the historical and conceptual background of the poem. Sixteen short essays are provided that offer new inquiry into such topics as the autobiographical nature of the poem, Dante's views on homosexuality, and the recurrent, problematic body analogy (Hell has a structure parallel to that of the human body). The extensive notes, containing much new material, explain the historical, literary, and doctrinal references, present what is known about the damned souls Dante meets --from the lovers who spend eternity in the whirlwind of their passion, to Count Ugolino, who perpetually gnaws at his enemy's skull--disentangle the vexed party politics of Guelfs and Ghibellines, illuminate difficult and disputed passages, and shed light on some of Dante's unresolved conflicts.
The Divine Comedy - Dante Alighieri
La Divine Comédie - Livre Audio
Dante Alighieri, Livres audio en français
audiobookLa Vita Nuova :
Dante Alighieri
audiobookInferno. Canto I :
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audiobookInferno. Canti I-XII :
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audiobookLa Divina Comedia - Audiolibro
Dante Alighieri, Audiolibros Clásicos, Audiolibros de Clásicos
audiobook50 Clásicos que debes leer antes de morir : Las Obras Inmortales de la Literatura Universal en un Solo Volumen
Dante Alighieri, Aristóteles, Jane Austen, Charles Baudelaire, Giovanni Boccaccio, Anne Brontë, C. Collodi, James Fenimore Cooper, Fedor Mikhaïlovitch Dostoïevski, Arthur Conan Doyle, Alexandre Dumas, José de Espronceda, Gustave Flaubert, Sigmund Freud, Benito Pérez Galdós, Kahlil Gibran, Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Zenith Horizon Publishing
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audiobookThe Divine Comedy : Dante's Epic Journey Through Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise
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bookThe Epic Poems Anthology : The Iliad, The Odyssey, Beowulf, Paradise Lost, The Divine Comedy, and More Timeless Masterpieces
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audiobookThe Divine Comedy : Dante's Epic Journey Through Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory
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