Dante's Sacred Poem Dante's Sacred Poem

Dante's Sacred Poem

Flesh and the Centrality of the Eucharist to The Divine Comedy

    • £33.99
    • £33.99

Publisher Description

Arguing that the consecrated body in the Eucharist is one of the central metaphors structuring The Divine Comedy, this book is the first comprehensive exploration of the theme of transubstantiation across Dante's epic poem. Drawing attention first to the historical and theological tensions inherent in ideas of transubstantiation that rippled through Western culture up to the early fourteenth century, Sheila Nayar engages in a Eucharistic reading of both the "flesh" allusions and "metamorphosis" motifs that thread through the entirety of Dante's poem.



From the cannibalistic resonances of the Ugolino episode in the Inferno to the Corpus Christi-like procession seminal to Purgatory, Nayar demonstrates how these sacrifice- and Host-related metaphors, allusions, and tropes lead directly and intentionally to the Comedy's final vision, that of the Eucharist itself. Arguing that the final revelation in Paradise is analogically "the Bread of Life," Nayar brings to the fore Christ's centrality (as sacrament) to The Divine Comedy-a reading that is certain to alter current-day thinking about Dante's poem.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2014
28 August
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
272
Pages
PUBLISHER
Bloomsbury Academic
SIZE
1
MB

More Books Like This

Dante's Commedia Dante's Commedia
2010
Imagining Heaven in the Middle Ages Imagining Heaven in the Middle Ages
2014
Dante and Epicurus Dante and Epicurus
2017
Arthurian Literature and Christianity Arthurian Literature and Christianity
2013
Challenging Communion Challenging Communion
2017
The End of the World in Medieval Thought and Spirituality The End of the World in Medieval Thought and Spirituality
2019

More Books by Sheila J. Nayar

Before Literature Before Literature
2019
The Sacred and the Cinema The Sacred and the Cinema
2012
Renaissance Responses to Technological Change Renaissance Responses to Technological Change
2018