TY - BOOK AU - Alighieri,Dante AU - Cary, Henry Francis TI - The divine comedy T2 - wordsworth classics of world literature SN - 9781840221664 U1 - 851.103 21 PY - 1999/// CY - Londres PB - Wordsworth KW - Literatura italiana KW - Siglo XII KW - ARMARC KW - Poesía italiana KW - LEMB KW - Infierno en la literatura KW - poesía N2 - Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) is one of the most important and innovative figures of the European Middle Ages. Writing his Comedy (the epithet Divine was added by7 later admires) in exile from his native Florence, he aimed to address a world gone astray both morally and politically. At the same time, he sought to push back the restrictive rules which traditionally governed writing in the Italian vernacular, to produce a radically new and all-encompassing work.The Comedy tells of the journey of a character who is at one and the same time both Dante himself and Everyman trough the three realms of the Christian afterlife: Hell, Purgatory and Heaven. He presents a vision of the afterlife which is strikingly original in its conception, with a complex architecture and a coherent structure. On this journey Dantes protagonist and his readermeet characters who are variously noble, grotesque, beguiling, fearful, ridiculous, admirable, horrific and tender, and trough them he is shown the consequences of sin, repentance and virtue, as he learns to avoid Hell and, through cleansing in Purgatory, to taste the joys of Heaven.Nota: el contenido de este libro se encuentra en inglés.The Comedy tells of the journey of a character who is at one and the same time both Dante himself and Everyman trough the three realms of the Christian afterlife: Hell, Purgatory and Heaven. He presents a vision of the afterlife which is strikingly original in its conception, with a complex architecture and a coherent structure. On this journey Dantes protagonist and his readermeet characters who are variously noble, grotesque, beguiling, fearful, ridiculous, admirable, horrific and tender, and trough them he is shown the consequences of sin, repentance and virtue, as he learns to avoid Hell and, through cleansing in Purgatory, to taste the joys of Heaven ER -