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The First Modern Poet...Today, no amount of praise for Dante seems enough.
American Conservative ^ | Jan 19, 2023 12:03 AM | S.A. Dance

Posted on 01/19/2023 8:48:43 AM PST by Red Badger

Serious Comedy: The Philosophical and Theological Significance of Tragic and Comic Writing in the Western Tradition, Patrick Downey, Davenant Press, 470 pages.

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Teaching Dante’s Inferno to high schoolers has its share of amusements. The expected outrage over Dante’s condemnation of sodomy, the bafflement over the sodomites’ proximity to the usurers (“What is that?” and then: “Why is that a sin?”), the shock at the gruesomeness, even in our desensitized age. The very concept of sin and punishment is a novelty to many. One student, after grasping what “lustful” meant, lamented “so many people are going to hell!”

The most surprising reaction I get, though, is from my more fundamentalist students. They have been to Sunday school. They know their Bible. Unlike my secular students, they are not scandalized by Catholic teaching on sodomy. They are disturbed by Dante’s creative liberties. “He doesn’t know what hell is like! How can he write this?” they protest. The whole project of The Divine Comedy strikes them as blasphemous. My attempt to convince them of the poem’s literary genius is a fruitless endeavor.

In the newly republished book Serious Comedy, philosopher Patrick Downey seems to agree with my fundamentalist students. His book is a fascinating and lengthy analysis of western philosophy through the lens of the ancient quarrel between comedy and tragedy. His analysis of Dante runs just nine pages in a 424-page book. The nine pages, though, contain a devastating critique of the Commedia. To understand his critique, we must first grasp his definition of tragedy and comedy and how the Bible functions in relation to them.

According to Downey, ancient tragedy served a political purpose. In a tragedy, the audience forgets itself, focusing on the hero’s downfall. By making the audience forget themselves, the tragic poet temporarily relieves them of the unresolvable tension that threatens to undermine the city: the conflict created by our boundless desire for finite goods. In sharing the catharsis of tragedy, the ancients concealed simmering civil conflict and cobbled together their cities. In this respect, tragedies are useful lies: hiding ourselves from ourselves so we can live with others.

Comedy, on the other hand, “winks” at the audience. The audience is always aware of the poet’s artifice. Through laughter, we join the comedic poet in acknowledging the gap between his artificial world and the truth outside the theater. Downey points out that when Plato ejects the poets from his city in The Republic, he is ejecting the tragic poets. Plato himself is a poet winking at us: his dialogues are comedies, inviting us beyond the artifice of the dialogue to the life of philosophical contemplation.

This philosophical life, though, could never be satiated. Why? First, because the knowledge gained by the philosopher is simply knowledge of his own ignorance; the whole cannot be known by a part within that whole. Second, the philosopher needs the very city that he has come to know to be founded on the lies of tragedy. Plato is the comedic poet and Socrates is his joke. “The joke of the character Socrates is that he is of no particular importance, no more than the poetic cave of Athens that he dwells in,” Downey writes, but Athens “put him to death thinking that it was important.”

The ancients were caught between the useful lies offered by tragedy and the painful truth offered by comedy. Damned either way, it seemed, until the “serious comedy” of the Bible frees us from this lose-lose reality.

On the one hand, the Bible is a comedy. The narrator reveals His presence to the audience. But that is not all. He also claims to be the author of reality, the Creator who alone creates out of nothing. The Incarnation is the climax of the comedic narrative because the poet becomes the main character, and narrative becomes history. We are now fully aware of His presence within and without the text. The biblical story and that of all of creation is His, and we are invited to join it. Accepting the invitation to live in the Bible and thus in reality constitutes our salvation.

Ancient comedy invited the reader to leave the cave of the theater and contemplate reality. The Bible now brings its readers the knowledge that can only be known through revelation because the divine poet, the maker of the whole, has revealed himself to the parts by becoming a part.

But the Bible is serious, too. Like ancient tragedy, it unifies its audience, not with lies, but with the truth of who the Biblical poet is. If ancient tragedy temporarily unified its audience through a believable artifice, the Bible now unifies its audience by providing the solution to our need for tragedy in the first place. The Biblical narrative does not hide our nature from us, but fully reveals it so that it may be healed by the divine poet himself. The ancient city, dependent on the artifice of tragedy, is transformed into an eternal kingdom, dependent on the Creator God’s “artifice”—reality itself.

Where does Dante fit into all of this? Downey argues that Dante “assimilated to himself the world-making powers of the Christian God.”

Downey draws on Thomas Aquinas’s hermeneutical distinction between the “literal” or “historical” sense of Scripture, in which words convey meaning in the ordinary sense, and the “spiritual” sense, in which “the things signified by words [in the ‘literal’/‘historical' sense]...also signify other things.” The “spiritual” sense has three layers: the "allegorical," in which the Old Law refers to the New Law; the "moral," in which the New Law refers to “what we should carry out”; and the "anagogical," in which the “things that lie ahead in eternal glory are signified.” The three spiritual senses apply exclusively to Scripture because its author is the Creator of reality, who alone has this power to match “things to things,” infusing the literal words of Scripture with spiritual meaning.

Dante reveals his “god-like aspirations" in a letter to Cangrande della Scala where he explicates the Thomistic “senses.” (But Dante calls them “in general…allegorical.”) He offers an example of an “allegorical” interpretation from Exodus and then asserts that “we must therefore consider the subject of this work [the Commedia] as literally understood, and then its subject as allegorically intended.” He wants his poem to be read “allegorically” in the same way he "allegorically” read Scripture. If Aquinas is right, though, Dante’s desire to be read allegorically is blasphemous. Only The Divine Poet may infuse a text with spiritual senses, as God did in writing the divine comedy, Scripture.

To demonstrate Dante’s hubris, Downey asks us to consider the famous inscription on the gates to hell in The Inferno. Dante, as the main character in his own poem, reads aloud the words that are supposedly written by the biblical God. Yet these words are “found nowhere in Scripture.” Dante invents words for the biblical God, who is but a supporting character to the main star, Dante himself. The only one capable of revealing God to us is God himself, but Dante’s God is an invention of Dante’s revelation. In Downey’s words, Dante gives “powers to the comic poet unheard of in the ancient world,” and paves the road for Romantic poets, who erase “the difference between their own creations and the unique claims of the biblical comedy.”

Why would Dante do this? Downey speculates that the Commedia imitates Scripture in an attempt at a new political founding for Italy. By linking his poem with the “preexisting comic structure of the Bible,” where narrator and protagonist are one in a world of his own making, Dante attempts to lend his own poem the “political power that, left to itself, his own comic poem would lack.” In other words, Dante wants his poem to accomplish what tragedy did for the pagan world.

“Dante…is trying to be the poet of Italy in the way Virgil was the poet of Rome.” But Dante cannot be a Christianized Virgil. Christianity already healed the wound for which Virgil’s poem (and all tragedy) was a bandage. Dante’s aspiration to the pagan glory of creating a national unifying artifice is for him to act as if Christianity did not exist. Precisely because Scripture is authored by the Creator, it solves the ancient political problem that made tragedy effective and necessary. Therefore, after God’s revelation is complete, any human poem either lives within the world of the Bible, as a poem within the poem of reality, or it rivals the Bible’s account of reality. Dante chooses the latter.

Today, no amount of praise for Dante seems enough. His Divine Comedy is the “greatest of all poems,” according to Anthony Esolen. He even “saved” Rod Dreher’s life. Downey, on the other hand, wishes to “shake Dante scholarship from its dogmatic slumber.” If he is correct, the great Christian poet may well represent the beginning of a very un-Christian turn in the West, one in which poets impose their own invented realities over-against the true reality revealed in Scripture.

And my fundamentalist students might be right.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

S.A. Dance is a teacher and writer in Northern California. His writing has appeared in The American Conservative, Quillette, the Federalist, and Christ and Pop Culture.


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Books/Literature; Education; History
KEYWORDS: epigraphyandlanguage; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; middleages; renaissance

1 posted on 01/19/2023 8:48:43 AM PST by Red Badger
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To: SunkenCiv

PinGGG!............................


2 posted on 01/19/2023 8:49:09 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Red Badger; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; ...
Thanks Red Badger.

3 posted on 01/19/2023 9:04:20 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Even the title, Divine Comedy, is a play on words.....................


4 posted on 01/19/2023 9:10:49 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Red Badger

bkmk


5 posted on 01/19/2023 9:28:16 AM PST by spankalib
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To: Red Badger

‘In Downey’s words, Dante gives “powers to the comic poet unheard of in the ancient world,” and paves the road for Romantic poets, who erase “the difference between their own creations and the unique claims of the biblical comedy.” ‘

No, not powers unheard of in the ancient world, just liberties purposefully not before taken in the ancient Christian world. If you read Homer, he is putting words in the mouths of the gods all the time. Dante, much like the Romantics after him, was just trying to recapture that “creative freedom” that was lost when paganism gave way to Christianity. Of course, if Christianity is accepted as true, then that “creative freedom”, taken too far, is actually license and blasphemy.


6 posted on 01/19/2023 9:29:31 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Red Badger

And it’s not about some fat crossdresser, either! :^)


7 posted on 01/19/2023 9:31:49 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: Red Badger
Or, we can simply reject this assertion:

"If Aquinas is right, though, Dante’s desire to be read allegorically is blasphemous. Only The Divine Poet may infuse a text with spiritual senses, as God did in writing the divine comedy, Scripture."

8 posted on 01/19/2023 9:33:33 AM PST by G Larry ( "woke" means 'stupid enough to fall for the promotion of every human weakness into a virtue')
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To: Red Badger

Modern? He was born 750 years ago.


9 posted on 01/19/2023 9:40:30 AM PST by KingLudd
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To: Red Badger

It’s like denigrating ‘Star Wars’ because it does not portray ‘real space travel’

It’s FICTION designed to portray ideas.


10 posted on 01/19/2023 9:56:55 AM PST by Mr. K (No consequence of repealing Obamacare is worse than Obamacare)
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To: Mr. K

Well, it was a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away....................


11 posted on 01/19/2023 9:59:58 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: KingLudd
Modern? He was born 750 years ago.

Seems like only yesterday.

12 posted on 01/19/2023 10:01:52 AM PST by frank ballenger (You have summoned up a thundercloud. You're gonna hear from me. Anthem by Leonard Cohen)
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To: KingLudd

In one sense, “modern” refers to anything from the time of the renaissance or later, which puts Dante right about at the dividing line.


13 posted on 01/19/2023 10:11:44 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Red Badger
Dante Bichette is pretty good too (lifetime batting average .299). No relation to the author of the Divine Comedy.
14 posted on 01/19/2023 10:41:43 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: Boogieman

“In one sense, “modern” refers to anything from the time of the renaissance or later ...”

I remember an interesting discussion on FR about the Renaissance and when it began. I don’t recall exactly but I think some agreed that it was about the time that Gutenberg printed the Bible. Dante died more than a century before that.


15 posted on 01/19/2023 10:41:54 AM PST by KingLudd
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To: KingLudd

It’s a bit of a nebulous question. In fact there wasn’t just one single “renaissance” like we talk about now, but a succession of renaissances... the Italian Renaissance, the German Renaissance, the French Renaissance, etc. The Italian was the earliest, while the German, which Gutenberg was a part of, was later.

I’d still say Dante is technically “pre-renaissance” even for Italy, but he is right on the dividing line and should rightfully be seen as a key precursor to the renaissance, kind of like a guitarist like T-Bone Walker is a key figure in rock ‘n roll music even though he never actually played rock ‘n roll, and belonged to an era that preceded it.


16 posted on 01/19/2023 10:51:52 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Red Badger

My Humanities professors at MIT assigned us to read Dante (in translation), and had us hear what part of the poems read in Italian sounded like!

They did a good deed!!!!


17 posted on 01/19/2023 10:53:39 AM PST by Honorary Serb (Kosovo is Serbia! Free Srpska! Abolish ICTY!)
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To: Red Badger
Interesting effort but way over-thought. The philosopher Downey’s “scathing” critique illustrates why critics just don’t have much to offer to the appreciation of art. As Wordsworth would have it, “they murder to dissect.”

Missing in all this is the intense personal dimension of la Comedia for Dante the man. The characters he encounters in the Inferno are real people against whom Dante held grievances: certain bishops of Rome, merchants, bankers of Florence; the conflict between the Guelphs and Ghibellines (Dante was a Guelph); and the redeeming power of love for his idealized Beatrice, whom he worshipped from afar but had barely ever met, yet who guides him to heaven in Paradiso.

Doesn’t sound like the writer, much less his students, has much interest in the significance of this classic allegory from the late Middle Ages. (Dante began writing it in 1300.) Because the Comedia was written in everyday Italian rather than Latin, it became the foundation for a united Italian language. In this regard Dante should be honored less as the latter day Virgil than as the Italian Shakespeare..

18 posted on 01/19/2023 11:03:06 AM PST by hinckley buzzard ( Resist the narrative.)
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To: Red Badger

=)


19 posted on 01/19/2023 11:06:08 AM PST by Mr. K (No consequence of repealing Obamacare is worse than Obamacare)
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To: Boogieman

I like your T-Bone analogy.


20 posted on 01/19/2023 2:11:58 PM PST by KingLudd
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