|
ABOUT US
Program description and history, contact and visitor information.
ACADEMIC RESOURCES
Conferences, lecture series, visiting professorships, courses, and library tours.
LIBRARY RESOURCES
In support of collection development in Dante and Italian Studies.
PUBLICATIONS
The Devers Series in Dante and Medieval Italian Literature, published by the University of
Notre Dame Press.
DIGITAL PROJECTS
The ItalNet Consortium for the creation of online scholarly resources in Italian studies.
GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS
In support of research and teaching, for ND students, faculty, and visiting researchers.
LINKS
Other Web resources related to Dante studies.
|
|
|
Interpreting Dante: Essays on the Traditions of Dante Commentary
Univ. of ND Press links:
Book information
Ordering information
|
Edited by Paola Nasti and Claudia Rossignoli
The William and Katherine Devers Series in Dante and Medieval Italian Literature, Volume 13
In Interpreting Dante: Essays on the Traditions of Dante Commentary, Paola Nasti and Claudia Rossignoli gather essays by prominent scholars of the Dante commentary tradition to discuss the significance of this tradition for the study of the Comedy, its broad impact on the history of ideas, and its contribution to the development of literary criticism.
|
Interest in the Dante commentary tradition has grown considerably in recent years, but projects on this subject tend to focus on philological reconstructions. The contributors shift attention to the interpretation of texts, authors, and reading communities by examining how Dante commentators developed interpretative paradigms that contributed to the advancement of literary criticism and the creation of the Western literary canon. Dante commentaries illustrate the evolution of notions of "literariness" and literature, genre and style, intertextuality and influence, literary histories, traditions and canons, authorship and readerships, paratexts and textual materiality. The volume includes methodological essays exploring theoretical aspects of the tradition, such as the creation of a taxonomy for categorizing typologies of commentaries; the relationship between commentators and their contemporary readers; the interplay between written and visual commentaries; and the impact of patronage on the forms of exegesis. Other essays, including two in Italian, examine case studies of individual commentaries, giving an account of the modus operandi of Dante's exegetes by relating their approaches to the cultural, ideological, and political agendas of the community of readers and scholars to which the commentators belonged.
Paola Nasti is senior lecturer in Italian Studies at the University of Reading.
Claudia Rossignoli is lecturer in Italian at the University of St. Andrews.
Contributors: Lucia Battaglia Ricci, Saverio Bellomo, Steven Botterill, Corrado Calenda, Massimiliano Chiamenti, Massimiliano Corrado, Simon Gilson, John Lindon, Andrea Mazzucchi, Paola Nasti, Spencer Pearce, Lino Pertile, Claudia Rossignoli, Claudia Tardelli, and Robert Wilson.
|
HOME > PUBLICATIONS > VOLUME 13: Interpreting Dante: Essays on the Traditions of Dante Commentary
|
|