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Parallel exempla : a theological reading of Dante's terrace of pride (Purgatorio X-XII)

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CORBETT_Parallel_Exempla_le_tre_corone_AM.pdf (362.1Kb)
Date
2017
Author
Corbett, George
Keywords
PQ Romance literatures
T-NDAS
BDC
R2C
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Abstract
The terrace of pride is framed by three examples of humility (Pg. x.34-93) and twelve (or thirteen) examples of pride (Pg. xii.25-63); its centrepiece is Dante-character's encounter with three prideful souls (Pg. xi.37-142). These three groups fall into three different cantos, and scholars have typically addressed them on their own. With each group, questions have arisen about Dante's choice of exempla, and scholars have been particularly puzzled by Dante's list, and ordering, of the exempla of pride (which has become, indeed, a crux of its own). This article interprets these three groups together as a triptych, and proposes that Dante's choice of exempla becomes understandable when we interpret them in relation to each other in terms of Dante's moral purpose for the terrace as a whole. It argues that Dante invites his reader to reflect upon the three prideful souls identified (Omberto, Oderisi and Salvani) and upon the three groups of prideful examples (delineated by the acrostic 'VOM') in counterposition with the three exempla of humility (Mary, King David and Trajan). By relating these three parts of the terrace and by drawing on a range of theological contexts, it shows how Dante models, in this way, a spiritual exercise of conversion from pride to humility.
Citation
Corbett , G 2017 , ' Parallel exempla : a theological reading of Dante's terrace of pride (Purgatorio X-XII) ' , Le Tre Corone , vol. 4 , pp. 73-96 . https://doi.org/10.19272/201712101004
Publication
Le Tre Corone
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.19272/201712101004
ISSN
2283-5768
Type
Journal article
Rights
© 2017, Publisher / the Authors. This work is made available online with permission from the publisher. This is the author created, accepted version manuscript following peer review and may differ slightly from the final published version. The final published version of this work is available at https://doi.org/10.19272/201712101004
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  • University of St Andrews Research
URL
http://www.libraweb.net/sommari.php?chiave=121
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/9090

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