ABSTRACT

Dante and the Other brings together noted and emerging Dante scholars with theologians, philosophers, psychoanalysts, and psychotherapists, bridging the Florentine’s premodern world to today’s postmodern context. Exploring how alterity has become a potent symbol in religion, philosophy, politics, and culture, this book will be of interest to many related fields.

The book offers a thorough foundation in approaching Dante as proto-phenomenologist. It includes an informative review of literature, historical insight into Dante’s poetics-toward-ineffability as alternative to modern scientism, a foray into science fiction, existential elaborations, phenomenological analyses of Inferno’s Canto I, and applications to psychotherapy and qualitative research. It also contains a poem from an imagined Virgil retiring in Limbo, and a meditation on Dante’s complicated relationship to homosexuality.

Dante and the Other presents the mystical passion of apophatic spirituality, the millennia-spanning Augustinianism of radical orthodoxy, Levinas, Heidegger, and many others—all driven by Dante’s Labors of Love. It is essential reading for Dante scholars, as well as readers interested in his works. 

part I|142 pages

Dante and Phenomenology

chapter 1|48 pages

Introduction

Dante and Phenomenology: A Review of Literature

chapter 2|21 pages

Representing the Other 1

Dante, Duns Scotus, and the Crisis of Representation in the Modern Age

chapter 3|8 pages

1321: A Space Odyssey

A Response to Franke

chapter 6|16 pages

From Poetics to Phenomenology

Consciousness in Dante’s Divine Comedy

chapter 7|30 pages

Gateways to the Ineffable

Dante’s Poetry as Proto-Phenomenology

part II|80 pages

Dante: Yesterday, Today, and Forever

chapter 8|2 pages

When Bici Said Come

chapter 10|9 pages

Surprised by Grace: Hermeneutic Reflections on Dante’s Judgments

A Response to Hawkins

chapter 11|19 pages

Purgatorio

A Liturgy of Forgiveness and Restoration