Lexington Books
Pages: 262
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-7936-2171-9 • Hardback • May 2020 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-7936-2173-3 • Paperback • December 2021 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-7936-2172-6 • eBook • May 2020 • $42.50 • (£35.00)
Fabian Alfie is professor of Italian at the University of Arizona.
Nicolino Applauso is visiting assistant professor of Italian at Loyola University Maryland.
Introduction: Dante Satiro - Fabian Alfie and Nicolino Applauso
Part 1: Satire in Dante’s Commedia
Chapter 1: The Ontoso Metro of Dante’s Sinners: Inferno 7 - Franco Suitner
Chapter 2: Inverted Popes, the Apostolic Succession, and Dante’s Vocation as Satirist - Ronald L. Martinez
Chapter 3: “Ed elli avea del cul fatto trombetta” (Inferno 21.139): Satire and Sodomy in Dante’s Inferno - Mary Watt
Chapter 4: “Se io mi trascoloro, non ti maravigliar”: Peter’s Invective and colores rhetorici in Paradiso 27 - Maggie Fritz-Morkin
Part 2: Satire in Dante’s Minor Works
Chapter 5: “Ut exinde potionare possimus dolcissimum ydromellum” (DVE 1.1.1): ‘Dante Satiro’ and the De vulgari eloquentia - Anthony Nussmeier
Chapter 6: Invective and Emotional Tones in Dante’s Convivio - Beatrice Arduini
Chapter 7: The Conundrum of Genre: Dante’s “Doglia mi reca” - Fabian Alfie
Chapter 8: Scelestissimis fiorentinis: Violence, Satire, and Prophecy in the ars dictaminis and Dante’s Political Epistles - Nicolino Applauso
Coda: The American Legacy of Dante Satiro
Chapter 9: Hell, Yes! Dante in Contemporary American Satire - Arielle Saiber
The essays in this volume examine satire in Dante’s Divine Comedy, lyric poetry, and prose works. Alfie (Univ. of Arizona) and Applauso (Loyola Univ. Maryland) understand satire as “the genre dedicated to the reprehension of vice” (p. 3). The editors' introduction will be much appreciated since it both positions the volume within Dante criticism and provides a brief accessible overview of medieval European understandings of satire. The volume is divided into two parts: the first (four essays) focuses on the Comedy, and the second (also four essays) looks at satire in the minor works. Highlights among the essays include a reassessment of Paradiso 27 by Maggie Fritz-Morkin (Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) and a novel analysis of satire in the De vulgari eloquentia by Anthony Nussmeier (Univ. of Dallas). The volume finishes with a lighthearted essay by Arielle Saiber (Bowdoin College) exploring how Dante has become an enduring reference in modern popular culture and humor. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
A well-rounded study that fleshes out one of the most contemporary aspects of Dante’s work: its use of satire as a means to reprehend vice and establish ethical values. Alfie and Applauso have put together an excellent volume with international reach, probing the classical, medieval, and ever-current aspects of the great poet’s satirical art. From the rotten pit of Hell to the celestial heights of Paradise, Dante spares no one and pulls no punches, targeting popes and emperors in both the Divine Comedy and his other works. Dante Satiro collects captivating readings by top Dante scholars, each of whom offers a compelling analysis of satire from the Middle Ages to its resonances with today’s media satirists: seven hundred years after his death, Dante is alive and well. Indeed, as one contributor to this volume reminds us, we should keep in mind Osip Mandelstam’s words: “It is unthinkable to read the cantos of Dante without aiming them in the direction of the present day … They are missiles for capturing the future.”— Francesco Ciabattoni, Georgetown University
We all know a lot about Dante “comico” and his style. But on the other hand no one has ever tried to read his works as belonging to satirical genre, as if he used the poetic code as a way to struggle with the vices of his time. This is what Dante Satiro: Satire in Dante Alighieri's Comedy and Other Works is made up of for the first time, not only relating to his masterpiece (the Commedia), but also looking for a satirical tone where it’s not expected, like in the linguistic treaty De vulgari eloquentia, or pointing out his influence on contemporary satire. — Marco Berisso, University of Genova