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    Simol Shah Dr. Soares November 3‚ 2014 HON 171 Hell’s Soul Purpose: Exploring the Rhetorical Constructions of Dante’s Inferno In his mildly satiric epic poem The Inferno (1317)‚ Dante Alighieri asserts that individuals must learn to reconcile their sympathy and emotional naiveté for the acceptance of suffering and the violence of God’s justice. He suggests that pity for sinners clouds an individual’s pursuit of stringent moral standards and could make him or her unfit for entrance into Purgatory

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    Dante’s Work a. The Divine Comedy (EPIC POEM) i. Inferno ii. Purgatory iii. Paradise 3. Dante’s Inspiration a. Beatrice of Florentine i. Dante’s love even though both of them are married ii. Guide in Paradise b. Virgil the poet i. Guide through purgatory and inferno ii. Dante’s levels of hell are based off of Virgil from the 6th book of the Aeneid 4. The Divine Comedy a. Written in exile b. Took 13 years to make c. 3 sections i. Inferno (Hell) ii. Purgatorio ( Purgatory) iii. Paradiso

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    Dante Alighieri’s The Inferno has been renowned as a great classic of western literature. To completely understand the direction of the novel you must to read between the lines. There are many reasons as to why Dante gave his sinners such specific punishments. Most of these punishments were closely related or the opposite of the sins committed. Irony is seen in many ways throughout The Inferno. As Dante takes you through his version of Hell he uses imagery to describe each of his nine levels‚ it’s

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    to live life in a more honorable manner. Dante Alighieri portrays this message in his infamous three-part poem‚ The Divine Comedy. The Italian poet takes the audience on a journey through the stories of Hell (Inferno)‚ Purgatory (Purgatorio)‚ and Heaven (Paradiso). Starting in the Inferno‚ Dante chronicles the expedition he himself experiences‚ under the faithful guidance of the Roman poet Virgil‚ as he travels through the nine circles of hell to reach heaven. Though an imaginative and gripping

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    Although Inferno is a religious text describing the Christian paradigms of Dante loved Florence immensely and wanted to see it thrive‚ but he instead was forced to watch as the citizens‚ political leaders‚ and religious leaders out the city into a downward spiral of immorality and conflict. The allusions Dante uses in the Inferno contribute to his goal of helping the readers understand the evils he is exposing. Each different allusion represents some aspect of political‚ social‚ or religious life

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    While he was away‚ the Black Guelfs completely took over Florence‚ and so Dante was exiled from his native city for the rest of his life. While in exile‚ he writes the Divine Comedy‚ Inferno‚ Purgatory and Paradise‚ and completed the Inferno in 1314. The poem follows Dante after he strays off the path of moral truth and gets lost in the dark woods. In the woods‚ Dante is greeted by three beasts; Virgil saves him from them and becomes his guide through hell

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    hating sinners and thinking that you are above them‚ you are able to get closer to Heaven. Readers are able to see the pious growth in Dante throughout the story as he moves from pitying spirits to despising and attacking them. In the beginning of the Inferno‚ Dante meets Paolo and Francesca. These two sinners are punished for their lustful affair‚ causing Dante such grief that he faints (5.141-142). “... And I‚ in such great pity‚ | fainted away as though I were to die‚” By fainting Dante shows that he

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    While I was looking back through all the freewrites I had written about Dante’s The Divine Comedy I realized how much I had really progressed in my understanding of the poem itself‚ and in doing so had really been given a whole new view on religion and spirituality. The freewrite that showed this growth to me the most was the second one we had written after reading Canto’s III and IV. I had a rather strong reaction to the ideas presented to me within those sections that dealt with the concept of

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    The thirteenth canto of Dante’s The Inferno clearly depicts several of the different themes that can be seen throughout the poem. Some of these themes are the idea of contrapasso‚ or the notion that the punishment dealt fits the crime committed‚ the portrayal of Hell as being devoid of hope‚ and the importance of fame. The images and language Dante uses to describe his experiences in the middle ring of the seventh circle of Hell‚ which houses the suicides‚ provide the reader with the feeling of

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    Dante's Inferno: Canto Xvi

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    Analysis of Dante’s Inferno: Canto XVI In the epic poem‚ The Divine Comedy‚ Dante Alighieri paints a vivid picture of hell‚ purgatory‚ and heaven while including his own interpretation of society. While looking particularly into the Inferno‚ the reader is given a true insight to the inner workings of Dante Alighieri’s mind as he assigns certain punishments to particular sinners from his time period. Dante arranges hell into nine circles and places sinners into each circle based on what evils they

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