Tag Archives: canto 34

Elements of the Inferno in As Above So Below

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M8xPTba541s&t=605s

^youtube video analyzing the movie in relation to Dante’s Inferno

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLq3zSm5SkQ

^clip from the final scene of the the movie, emerging from the catacombs/Hell

Part of what makes Dante’s Inferno such an important text is that it is still very relevant today.  One example of this is the movie As Above So Below, which adapts some important concepts from the Inferno into its structure.  Throughout reading the Inferno, various references the movie had made became clear and the youtube video provided highlights many of those examples as well as a more in depth look at how the entire movie follows some of the themes from the Inferno.  Rather than repeating the things mentioned in the video, there are some very important ideas in the movie that have clearly been taken from Dante’s work which were not mentioned or not adequately discussed in the video.

One of the most unmistakeable references to the Inferno comes at the end of the movie, where they exit “Hell” or the catacombs.  This scene directly correlates to the scene in the Inferno where Dante and Virgil leave Hell.  Throughout their journey through the catacombs, the characters were told that the only way out is down–just like Dante and Virgil, they must travel through all of Hell before they can leave.  The most striking similarity comes when the group jumps down a deep well with a sewer grate at the bottom; believing in gravity and the downward direction they have been headed in this whole time, they try to lift up the grate but find that to get out they must push it down.  This is the same as the Pilgrim’s realization that he is climbing down Lucifer and not up as he had thought: “I raised my eyes, thinking to see Lucifer as I had left him, and I saw that his legs were extended upward” (canto 34, lines88-89).  This similarity continues after the emergence from Hell.  Dante describes the Pilgrim’s emergence out of Hell as the moment “I saw the beautiful things the heavens carry, through a round opening” (canto 34, lines136-138).  Dante is describing the stars and showing the reader that he comes out of Hell back to earth, not directly to purgatory.  This image Dante gives us is almost exactly the same as the image in As Above So Below, since the group is upside down, when they push the sewer grate they are looking up at the earth–through a round opening–and see nothing but the night sky, a tree, and a street light.  This image is taken directly out of Dante’s writing.

One other similarity between the movie and the Inferno that is not discussed much in the video is the saying “as above so below” itself.  This saying comes from alchemy and is explained in the movie with an image on the wall in the catacombs, shown in the youtube video at 9:08, this part in the movie explains that it is a symbol meant to show the connection between heaven and earth in alchemy–“as it is on earth so it will be in heaven”.  However, this movie has nothing to do with heaven, since the catacombs are a metaphor for Hell, so it is clear that this image (which is upside down) is inverted to mean “as it is on earth so it will be in hell” in relation to the characters in the movie.  This theory (although here cited as from alchemy–a practice damnable in Hell by Dante’s standards) bears a striking similarity to the theory of the contrapasso in the Inferno.  The contrapasso is essentially a punishment which fits the crime and the word itself is specifically associated with the Inferno.  Using the structure of the words in the movie, one could use “as one was on earth, so they will be in hell” or “as one is in life, so they will be in death” as a synonym or explanation of Dante’s contrapasso.  Dante’s use of the contrapasso creates some of the most striking images in the Inferno.  For example, Ugolino and Ruggieri in canto 33: as Ugonlino was starved to death by Ruggieri in life, so Ruggieri is eaten by the one he starved in death.

The transition from torment, sin & evilness to spiritual cleansing, unification & praise

In canto 33, the sinner who is chewing on his neighbor raises his head and tells Dante that he is Count Ugolino from Pisa and he eats the head of Archbishop Ruggieri (who imprisoned Ugolino and his sons in a tower, where they starved to death). Ugolino re-tells his story to Dante, by saying that starvation led Ugolino to gnaw at his own hands and his sons mistook this for hunger and offered their bodies as food, willingly sacrificing their own bodies. Ugolino states, “There he died; and as you see me, I saw the three fall one by one between the fifth day and the sixth; and I, already blind, took to groping over each of them, and for two days I called them, after they were dead. Then fasting had more power than grief” (Canto 33, lines 70-75). Dante cries out against Pisa because Ugolino was a traitor, but his sons were starved to death as a punishment for Ugolino’s betrayal in which Dante the author accuses the Pisan government of unjustly punishing Ugolino’s sons. Dante uses this individual’s story (Ugolino) as a way to criticize an Italian town; unlike Dante the pilgrim’s previous journey where he faints from the pity from Francesca and Paolo’s story, Dante is learning to moderate his responses in regard to the suffering souls of the sinners. But for Dante the author, Ugolino’s betrayal of his city does not negate or make invalid the fact that Ugolino loves his sons and the grief Ugolino felt for his sons was genuine. Moving on to the next ring, one suffering soul begs Dante to pull the layer of frozen tears from his face, so that he can cry once more (even though these tears will freeze over his face again and again). Dante agrees as long as the spirit tells him his name, which is Fra Alberigo. Friar Alberigo killed his own brother after inviting him to a dinner. Dante learns Alberigo is not dead, but that this region of Hell called Ptolomaea (which reserves souls for those who betray guests; the demon in this circle holds the souls even before they have died). The bodies of these people are then possessed by demons on earth. He points out another suffering soul to Dante whom is Branca d’Oria, who Dante knows to be alive. Dante’s sense of God’s justice is evident as Fra Alberigo asks Dante to scrape the ice from his eyes but Dante refuses, saying “I did not open them for him; and it was courtesy to treat him boorishly” (Canto 33, lines 149-150). This canto draws a contrast between Dante’s criticism of the Pisan government, which demonstrates the imperfection of human beings and God, whose punishments may seem pitiless but are always just.

 

In canto 34, Virgil and Dante are approaching Hell and the king of Hell –Satan. Satan has three faces: one red, one yellow, and one black. Satan also has three pairs of wings that beat which causes the great wind and freezes the river. In each mouth he chews a sinner—Judas Iscariot, who betrayed Jesus, and Brutus and Cassius, who betrayed Julius Caesar. Virgil and Dante then climb up onto Satan’s monstrous body. Dante holds tight to Virgil as they make the perilous climb up Satan’s body (which isn’t the first time they climb up something steep; which occurs in Canto 24-25 — when they cross the bridge). Dante and Virgil finally reach an area in which they can rest. Dante looks out from it, expecting to see Lucifer’s head, but instead Dante the pilgrim sees his legs stretching up before him, as if everything is upside down. Also, instead of night, its now morning. Virgil says they have passed through Earth into the Southern Hemisphere, and because Satan fell to Earth from Heaven in this hemisphere, there is no land, just ocean. As a transitional segue, Virgil gives more information about the structure of the world as he and Dante move towards Purgatorio. When Satan fell from Heaven, Virgil says, his impact caused a pit to form on Earth which became Hell. Dante looks up and is able to see the bright stars in the sky, which he hasn’t seen since entering hell. The symbolism of the three heads represents Dante’s tendency to mix Christian figures (the holy trinity) with those from Greek and Roman history and mythology. The other demons of Hell express emotion(s), however, Satan, as the manifestation of damnation doesn’t explain his circumstances or express any emotion; instead Satan seems automatic in a mechanical way – hence his tears and his violent, chewing of the sinners. Perhaps Dante the writer does this as way to show that while many of the other sinners are affected by evilness, they still remain fundamentally human; which is something readers are able to see in Virgil and Dante as well. However, pure evil (like Satan) contains no traces of humanity. The imagery in the ending of this canto is visually appealing when Dante writes, “My leader and I entered on that hidden path to return to the bright world; and, without taking care for rest at all, up we climbed, he first and I second, until I saw the beautiful things the heavens carry, through a round opening. And thence we came forth to look again at the stars” (canto 34, lines 133-139).  Dante the pilgrim is no longer in a dark wood: but instead is exiting from the world of torment, suffering and sin and heading towards a world signaling God’s presence: emerging into the light of God’s love. He has to more to learn on his journey and has to move forward, but at the end of Inferno, the cantica suggests that Dante the pilgrim is no longer lost.

 

Canto 1 in Purgatorio an important soul appears which is Cato — Cato who was a Roman politician and known for his defiance of Julius Caesar. Cato questions Dante and Virgil asking Virgil why he is in Purgatory, since Virgil’s soul is designated to Limbo and Dante is not yet dead. Virgil explains to Cato that their journey is permissioned by the heavenly figure Beatrice whom asked Virgil to lead Dante through the afterlife. Cato orders Virgil to prepare Dante by binding his waist with a reed and washing him clean of the filth of Hell. Because Cato is a non-Christian, it seems strange he welcomes souls entering into Purgatory. Therefore, Cato would seem to belong with Virgil in Limbo. In addition, another, more perceptible problem is Cato’s death is suicide, which he chose rather than surrender to his enemy Julius Caesar. Traditionally, Catholic religion held suicide to be among the greatest of mortal sins, and Dante puts those who died by suicide their own special place in Hell (canto 13 with Pier Della Vigna). However, Dante the poet, makes an exception for Cato, whose suicide is excused and even proves the politician’s righteous nature. Canto 2 in Purgatorio, there is a flash of light from across the sea which signals the approach of an angel coming towards Dante and Virgil, a sight that overpowers Dante when he states, “When, for a moment, I’d withdrawn my eyes that I might ask a question of my guide, I saw that light again, larger, more bright. Then, to each side of it, I saw a whiteness, though I did not know what that whiteness was; below, another whiteness slowly showed” (canto 2, lines 19-24). This angel is guiding a boat which contains departed souls heading towards Mount Purgatory. The souls ask Virgil and Dante for directions, but Virgil admits he knows nothing of the geography when he states, “but we are strangers here, just as you are” (canto 2, line 63). Dante recognizes a friend, a musician named Casella (who is also a passenger of the boat). As Dante moves to embrace Casella, he is surprised because he grasps only air. Casella talks with Dante about life back in Italy then sings a song — Dante pleasantly listens to the soul when he says, “he then began to sing—and sang so sweetly that I still hear that sweetness sound in me” (canto 2, 113-114). Other souls join Dante in listening to the song but Casella leaves in a hasty departure. Although Dante is not dead yet, he is welcomed by the penitents with curiosity and politeness. This is one difference noted between Purgatory and Hell is that Purgatory is structured around this idea of fellowship with others, whereas the souls in Hell are cut off from God and from one another (like Farinata and Cavalcanti are in the same tombstone but don’t communicate and acknowledge each other). The damned are physically near one another, their sinful behavior causes them to be in a terrible form of solitary confinement. The singing from Cato and the souls listening also displays a type of form such as reciting psalms and singing hymns. Therefore, Purgatory consists of souls who come together in divine praise.