The Denial Of God In Dante's Inferno

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Let us consider the case of Inferno 10, where Dante treats God and the immortality of the soul, “who hold that the soul dies with the body” (Inf. 10.15). This being adopts: he does not represent the is not God. Farinata’s excessive attachment is to Florence: his closure toward God is viewed through the lens of political closure, the civic heresy whereby fraternal bonds between fellow Florentines become divisive reflected in the poetic closure of his son Guido, whose poetry denied the possibility that women could be beatifiers and lead to salvation. The decision to treat denial of God as an embrace of something else allows Dante to weave a fabric of great complexity whose threads include both contemporary politics and expressed by its sinners,

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