Chapter "Experience that Generates Experience": The Influence of the Comedy in three South African Writings

This article aims to explore the intertextual relationships between Dante's Divine Comedy and three pieces of creative writing: Chariklia Martalas' "A Mad Flight into Inferno Once Again", Thalén Rogers' "The Loadstone" and Helena van Urk's "The Storm&quo...

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Wedi'i Gadw mewn:
Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awdur: Medugno, Marco (auth)
Fformat: Electronig Pennod Llyfr
Iaith:Saesneg
Cyhoeddwyd: Florence Firenze University Press 2021
Cyfres:Studi e saggi
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Mynediad Ar-lein:DOAB: download the publication
DOAB: description of the publication
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Crynodeb:This article aims to explore the intertextual relationships between Dante's Divine Comedy and three pieces of creative writing: Chariklia Martalas' "A Mad Flight into Inferno Once Again", Thalén Rogers' "The Loadstone" and Helena van Urk's "The Storm". By employing a comparative analysis, I argue that, even though decontextualised, the Comedy still represents a fruitful aesthetic source for representing particularly war-torn and violent contexts such as South Africa during apartheid and colonialism. I explore how the authors, through intertextual references and parodic rewriting, both re-configure the poem and challenge some of the Comedy's moral assumptions and the idea of (divine) justice. I aim to show how Dantean Hell, far from being an otherworldly realm, is in fact transfigured and adapted to effectively represent (and make sense of) a historical context. In other words, through an intertextual analysis, this analysis tries to understand why and how the Comedy resonates with the South African socio-political (and literary) context.
Disgrifiad Corfforoll:1 electronic resource (12 p.)
ISBN:978-88-5518-458-8.08
9788855184588
Mynediad:Open Access