Dante’s Comedy and Joseph Gallagher’s Modern Guide

I finally finished Dante’s Comedy the fourth and final book for the Really Old Classics Read challenge http://reallyoldclassics.wordpress.com/join-the-challenge. Thank you to rebeccareid of http://reviews.rebeccareid.com for hosting the event.

This was a great excuse to brush off some older books I have been meaning to read but never got around to.
As part of the challenge we were asked to not only pick books written before the 1400s but to find a retelling of a classic. I choose to read To Hell and Back, a Modern Reader’s Guide to the Divine Comedy along with my favorite translation by Robert Pinsky.

I fell in love with Dante back in college when I took an introduction course in humanities. The class should have been titled A journey with Dante as most of the course centered on his epic poem. My professor Mr. Hubart was one of those rare teachers who not only taught old text but also taught his students to love old works, especially Dante. We took field trips to old Catholic Churches in order to understand the symbolism in Dante’s words. We were lucky enough to see a Dante exhibit at the San Francisco De Young Museum. The exhibit included paintings and sculptures all based on the 9 circles of hell. Each piece of work hit me in different ways, ways I cannot fully articulate. As a young impressible girl I studied the pieces trying to understand the beauty and sadness in each. I had hoped that someday I would be able to own a few of the pieces but try as I might; I have never seen them again. 20 something years later I can still vision them in my head.
Over the years I have collected translations of Dante’s work as well as a very old biography on the poet. The poem and its deep meaning are always with me. Now that I am middle age and struggling with my identity the beginning passage “Midway on our life’s journey, I found myself in dark woods, the right road lost” hits me more than it did when I was 19. I am now at the midway point in my life and feel more connected to the poet and poem than at any other time in my life. I felt now would be a good time to not only re-read the poem but read a modern guide to help me better understand it.

Joseph Gallaher writes in the preface that he wrote To Hell and Back “to help modern readers master Dante’s masterpiece”. I had hoped this would be the case, but sadly I feel this guide is lacking in spark and well, guidance. Gallaher said he spent 17 years studying the poem yet the guide is a quick rundown of each Canto (like a chapter but shorter) much like Cliffnotes or Sparknotes would do. What I was hoping for was an analysis into the poem’s deeper meaning, much like Professor Hubart would give. I was disappointed with the lack of depth in the guide, because in order to fully appreciate the poem one has to look beyond the written words.

For those of you who do not know much about the poem let me explain. The poem is a fictional account of Dante’s journey into hell, purgatory and finally the lower part of heaven. Dante is middle age and seems to be “lost”. A woman named Beatrice (the love of this life) sees him from heaven and taking pity on him, asks the Greek poet Virgil to be Dante’s guide through the otherworlds. This journey is Beatrice’s way of saving Dante and allowing him to attain grace. Along the journey Dante meets people from his home town of Florence, long dead poets, famous sinners and a few biblical prophets. Almost every word in the poem has been carefully chosen and has more than one meaning. Dante quotes the bible in order to drive a point home. If one does not understand the biblical passage, the point is lost.

In order to fully understand the poem the reader must learn something about these people, otherwise their punishment or reward will make little sense. Understanding Catholic symbolism is a must, as well as old Christianity dogma. Gallagher does explain the basic premise of each Canto and introduces the modern reader to the characters in the poem, but never explains why Dante choose these people or why he chose certain biblical passages as part of his poem. Reading Gallagher’s guide did offer some help but honestly just made me miss my old professor even more.
I will recommend the book to those who have never read Dante’s work but would like to try. Just be warned, that though Gallagher tells us this is one of the greatest pieces of works ever written, he lacks the talent that would have the first time reader coming away fully understanding why this is so.

For a very poetic translation of Dante’s Inferno I would recommend Robert Pinksy. I had always hoped he would have done the whole poem as his talent for poetry and Dante is the best I have read to date. The American poet Longfellow has a translation out that I would recommend for first time readers. My son bought me a newly republished Longfellow version that he found at Barnes and Nobel. It is a very nice looking book and contains the famous Gustave Dore illustrations. http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Divine-Comedy/Dante/e/9781435103849/?itm=1&usri=dante+s+divine+comedy+hell+purgatory+paradise

Kindles are NOT better than books

This week has been a pretty good week, after all most of us received presents and spread good cheer. I planned to forgo this week’s rant but after reading posts from new E-Reader owners I changed my mind, sort of. This week is a kind of rebuttal to those who feel the need to come up with excuses as to why they now own an E-Reader; excuses that try to claim E-Readers are good for the environment. I am going to pick on Kindles, not because I do not like them, but because the people that claim to be environmentally friendly all have Kindles. I think of the Kindle as the Ipod of MP3 players. The Kindles like the Ipod s are the hottest e-reader gadgets to own; at least this is what we are being led to believe by the media and Amazon. Let me make it clear, I see nothing wrong with owning any E-Reader and do not feel anyone needs a reason to own one. No, this rant is for those who are feeling smug about owning one, much like their parents must have felt owning the first Volvos while drinking their Starbuck coffee. Remember those people?

Here are the top three excuses I have heard this week and why they need to be addressed.

3) I can now carry all my books with me where ever I go. One guy boasted that he now has all 1700 of his books on his Kindle (is that even possible?). Now I have found myself from time to time wishing I had a book with me. These are the times when I have to wait for something or someone unexpectedly. Normally I carry a paperback in my car but I do not always have one in my purse, luckily for me I do have a couple of classics loaded in my Ipod Touch so in a pinch I can always read a few chapters of Alice and Wonderland or The Jungle Book. But all of my books? At one time??There has only been two times in my life when I wanted all of my books with me, two times when I tried to figure out how to carry all of my books. This is when I moved from one house to another house. At no other time I have wished to have all my books with me. When I was laid up in the hospital last year with nothing to do it never occurred to me that I would feel much better or the room would be cozier if I had all my books with me. It was a good time to read books that I had been putting off. When you do not have a wide choice of books you tend to finish what you do have. I read three Shakespeare plays and finally finished Ulysses by Joyce. If I had access to all my books Joyce may have been cast aside and I would have missed out on a good read. Here is when I think it would be great to have all of your unread books with you; when you are in college and have your texts loaded in an E-Reader. I would rejoice if someone came up with an E-Reader for college students. Lugging large heavy texts are good for chiropractors but bad for students. If there was an E-Reader that allowed for text books, I would be first in line. But all of my books? Back to the young man who claimed to have 1700 books in his collection. All I can say is he either has a serious case of ADD or likes the idea of being able to show off his collection, much like my ex-brother in law liked to show off his $20,000 watch that as far as I could tell did the same thing as my $5.00 watch.

2) Books are just dead trees. Well so is a house and all of the furniture in it. As I told the young girl who said this, those who think this better start living like the Flintstones and purchase only that which is made of rock. Sorry blonde, but books are made from wood pulp, the byproduct of wood. No old growth trees are cut down to make paper. Since the 1800 paper has been made from t discarded wood material. Material that otherwise would go to waste. The wood pulp is from trees that grow in abundance and are used to make furniture. Granted, the chemicals that are part of the bleaching process is not great for the environment, but books themselves are not the reason trees are cut down,. Which leads us to the number one ridicules excuse I have heard this week.

1). Kindles are environmentally better than books. Where do I even begin! I researched all the E-Readers and cannot find any mention of the use of recycled material in them. Amazon does offer a recycle program for dead Kindles but does not say they use recycled plastic material in the making of the Kindles. This means that for every one out there, new material was manufactured. No byproducts were used. As for the recycle program, I give Amazon credit for coming up with one, but I wonder how many people will take the time to send their old Kindles off? It is hard enough to get us to recycle our household waste, and it is picked up on a weekly basis! This means that many of the old Kindles will end up in our landfills along with all the other E-Readers, MP2 players etc. At least when a book ends up in the landfill it will eventually disintegrate and become part of the earth. Kindles need to be recharged, and the only way to do this is using electricity, you know the stuff we are supposed to be conserving? I have a few books on my shelves that are over 200 years old and as far as I know they have never needed to be recharged. Oil, natural gas and carbon are the basic building blocks of plastic, again the stuff we are supposed to be conserving. Then in comes the chemical process that is needed to make sturdy long lasting plastic. Wood pulp, bleach, and ink are what our books are made of. Kindles on the other hand are made of nonrenewable sources that are becoming more and more expensive to attain. Which now sounds better for the environment? Kindles are manufactured in China and have to be flown thousands of miles so we consumers can have them. Most books are manufactured in the country of origin. In other words when you buy a book you buy (insert your country name here). The carbon foot print of any book is far smaller than the Kindle.

Now this argument can be made for many things, there are always pros and cons for everything we buy. I grapple with this everyday as I see my plastic use go up, not down as I wish. But I do not make excuses for my purchases; instead I live with my choices. I do not try to make myself feel better by making ridicules claims about the things I buy, and I swear the next time I hear another Kindle is better than a book claim I am going to drive over the Kindle loving idiot with my SUV, while drinking a latte and listening to REM on my Ipod!

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