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Purgatory I and II

By Giuseppe Mazzotta - Yale
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Lecture Description

In this lecture, Professor Mazzotta introduces Purgatory and proceeds with a close reading of Cantos I and II. The topography of Mount Purgatory is described, and the moral system it structures is contrasted with that of Hell. Dante's paradoxical choice of Cato, a pagan suicide, as guardian to the entrance of Purgatory ushers in a discussion of freedom from the standpoint of classical antiquity, on the one hand, and Judaism, on the other. In his refusal to be enslaved by the past, both on earth and in the afterlife, Cato is seen to embody the virtues of exile, setting an example for the penitent souls of Ante-purgatory (Purgatory II), including the pilgrim, who still clings to the comforts of the past.

Course Description

Course Index

  1. Introduction to Dante
  2. Vita Nuovo
  3. Inferno I, II, III and IV
  4. Inferno V, VI and VII
  5. Inferno XII, XIII, XV and XVI
  6. Inferno XIX, XXI, XXV and XXVI
  7. Inferno XXVI, XXVII and XXVIII
  8. Inferno XXX, XXXI, XXXII, XXXIII andXXXIV
  9. Purgatory I and II
  10. Purgatory V, VI, IX, X
  11. Purgatory X, XI, XII, XVI and XVII
  12. Purgatory XIX, XXI and XXII
  13. Purgatory XXIV, XXV and XXVI (Guest lecturer Professor David Lummus)
  14. Purgatory XXX, XXXI and XXXIII
  15. Paradise I and II
  16. Paradise IV, VI and X
  17. Paradise XI and XII
  18. Paradise XV, XVI and XVII
  19. Paradise XVIII, XIX, XXI and XXII
  20. Paradise XXIV, XXV and XXVI
  21. Paradise XXVII, XXVIII and XXIX
  22. Paradise XXX, XXXI, XXXII and XXXIII
  23. General Review