Dante - The Divine Comedy - Live Reading (Week One)
Details
## The Divine Comedy - Dante Alighieri (1265–1321)
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📌 The Divine Comedy is more than
a story — it’s a map of the inner self.
- It teaches about choices, responsibility, and consequences.
- It shows how struggle and self‑reflection can lead to growth and spiritual awakening.
- The journey mirrors our own personal transformation — confronting flaws, repenting, and aiming for higher understanding and compassion.
A short 5-minute TEDx video introducing The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri.”
https://youtu.be/YbCEWSip9pQ?si=XybZNFwcuzJfCTuU
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## 🧍 Who Was Dante?
- Dante Alighieri was a medieval Italian poet from Florence.
- He is considered one of the greatest writers in world literature and one of the founders of the Italian language.
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## 🔥 What Is The Divine Comedy?
- A long epic poem written in terza rima (a special rhyming scheme) in the early 1300s.
- It describes a symbolic journey through the afterlife: Hell → Purgatory → Heaven.
- 🌍 What the Three Parts Represent
### 1. ⚫ Inferno (Hell)
- Dante travels through the nine circles of Hell guided by the Roman poet Virgil.
- Each circle punishes a different kind of sin.
- Theme: Recognizing the consequences of wrongdoing and human weaknesses.
### 2. 🔺 Purgatorio (Purgatory)
- Dante and Virgil climb the mountain of Purgatory, where souls purify themselves.
- It’s full of hope and change — sinners repent and grow.
- Theme: Transformation and self‑improvement.
### 3. ☀️ Paradiso (Heaven)
- Beatrice (Dante’s ideal guide of divine love) leads him through the celestial spheres.
- Dante encounters angels and blessed souls.
- Theme: Divine love, spiritual fulfillment, and union with God.
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## 📅 How We’ll Proceed (Weekly Plan)
- Week 1: Canto I (Inferno) — Introduce Dante lost in the dark wood.
- Week 2: Canto II — Dante meets Virgil.
- Week 3: Canto III — The Gate of Hell.
…and so on, one canto each week.
For each meeting, you can:
✅ Read the canto together
✅ Discuss key images, themes, and lines
✅ Talk about how the canto relates to self‑discovery
✅ Watch an explanatory video
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## 📚 Links to the Book (Public Domain)
Full text (English, public domain):
📎 The Divine Comedy: Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso – Project Gutenberg
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/8800
Easier version:
https://almabooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/The-Divine-Comedy.pdf
🎥 Video Resources (Helpful for Each Week)
YALE UNIVERSITY LECTURE BY: GIUSEPPE MAZZOTTA
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD1450DFDA859F694
## ✨ The Group Sessions - We will follow:
- We will Start each session with a brief recap of the last canto.
- What stood out most to you?
- Relate themes to your own/each lives and growth.
- Open sharing will be encouraged — the poem is as much about inner questions as it is about spiritual imagery.
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