Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

‘Arriving before us’: seeing, ingenuity and imagination in Dante: Simon Gilson's Inaugural lecture

Series
Modern Languages Inaugural lectures
Video Embed
During his inaugural lecture, Professor Gilson will show how ideas about vision and cognate faculties such as the wits and the imagination are central to Dante’s masterpiece, the Commedia.
Understanding these concerns helps us to appreciate not only how his narrative is structured and enlivened but also raises fundamental questions about the poem’s status, ultimate themes and messages.

Simon Gilson Agnelli-Serena Professor of Italian Studies at the University of Oxford and a fellow of Magdalen College. He works on Dante and Renaissance Italian literary, cultural and intellectual history. He has published widely on Dante, literary criticism in Renaissance Italy, and the relations between science, philosophy and literary culture in medieval and Renaissance Italy.

More in this series

View Series
Modern Languages Inaugural lectures

The Future of German Studies

Round Table on the occasion of the Inaugural Lecture of Henrike Lähnemann
Previous
Modern Languages Inaugural lectures

Of all things broken and lost: Durs Grünbein’s Perspectives on Dresden and the problems of modern Elegy

Professor Karen Leeder delivers the inaugural Schwarz-Taylor Lecture
Next

Episode Information

Series
Modern Languages Inaugural lectures
People
Simon Gilson
Keywords
Dante
literature
italien literature
poetry
religion
divine comedy
language
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 22/10/2019
Duration: 01:07:39

Subscribe

Apple Podcast Video Video RSS Feed

Download

Download Video

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
'Oxford Podcasts' Twitter Account @oxfordpodcasts | MediaPub Publishing Portal for Oxford Podcast Contributors | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2022 The University of Oxford