hBjcDQfnMguRXVnjTNgM Mark Scarbrough's WALKING WITH DANTE: Strolling Down The Avenue With The Demons In Inferno, Canto XXI, Lines 13 - 39 - Walking With Dante

Episode 129

Strolling Down The Avenue With The Demons: Inferno, Canto XXII, Lines 13 - 39

Published on: 2nd February, 2022

Dante, our pilgrim, and Virgil, his guide, have fallen in with a pack of nasty demons who are on the prowl for any barrators who stick up from the boiling pitch in the fifth evil pouch in the circle of fraud.

Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as we get super literary with this rather simple passage and begin to try to answer the most pressing question for Dante: how do you make your fraudulent story seem real?

Here are the segments of this episode of WALKING WITH DANTE:

[01:08] My English translation of this passage: INFERNO, Canto XXI, lines 13 - 39. If you'd like to read along, you can find this translation on my website, markscarbrough.com.

[03:42] How do you "read" (in the literary sense--that is, "interpret") these cantos with the barrators, the political grifters? I have three suggestions: 1) as a comic interlude in INFERNO, 2) as one of many genres the poet plays with during the course of INFERNO, or 3) as a pressing moment in which Dante's fraudulent poetics come into contact with his real life journey in exile.

[14:16] How does Dante the poet establish verisimilitude (that is, the appearance of being real or true) in this fifth pouch of the malebolge? 1) With natural imagery. 2) With folksy colloquialisms. 3) With personal details of his real life. And 4) through the self-conscious admission of the act of writing the artifice of poetry.

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About the Podcast

Walking With Dante
A passage-by-passage stroll through Dante’s DIVINE COMEDY with Mark Scarbrough
Ever wanted to read Dante's Divine Comedy? Come along with us! We're not lost in the scholarly weeds. (Mostly.) We're strolling through the greatest work (to date) of Western literature. Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I take on this masterpiece passage by passage. I'll give you my rough English translation, show you some of the interpretive knots in the lines, let you in on the 700 years of commentary, and connect Dante's work to our modern world. The pilgrim comes awake in a dark wood, then walks across the known universe. New episodes every Sunday and Wednesday.
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Mark Scarbrough

Former lit professor, current cookbook writer, creator of two podcasts, writer of thirty-five (and counting) cookbooks, author of one memoir (coming soon!), married to a chef (my cookbook co-writer, Bruce Weinstein), and with him, the owner of two collies, all in a very rural spot in New England. My life's full and I'm up for more challenges!