
The Infinite Beauty of the World
Dante's Encyclopedia and the Names of God
Jason M. Baxter(Author)
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 31. August 2020
Book
Paperback/Softback
182 pages
978-1-78874-395-2 (ISBN)
Description
This book proposes a radically new interpretation of the Comedy's encyclopedism by focusing on Dante's work in light of the medieval imago mundi tradition. The work opens with a discussion of how the Florentine poet transgressed every generic boundary in his effort to gather «into one volume» a vast and varied set of creatures, places, landscapes, historical and mythological persons, weather conditions, and arts. It then goes on to show that this extraordinary encyclopedic breadth should be understood in the terms of Boethian and Augustinian spiritual exercises of envisioning the whole world in the mind's eye, which themselves became the interpretive framework for the spiritual ends behind medieval encyclopedic texts. By bringing attention to Latin Platonism and twelfth-century authors (such as Alan of Lille, Bernard Silvestris, William of Conches, Hugh of St. Victor, and Thierry of Chatres), this book provides compelling new readings of the De vulgari eloquentia, as well as provocative insights into key figures (such as Brunetto Latini, Pier della Vigna, and Ulysses) and key passages (Purgatorio 28, Paradiso 26, and Paradiso 33).
Reviews / Votes
<<The Infinite Beauty of the World offers a fascinating interpretive journey towardsricher appreciation of the Commedia as a cosmological poem. Baxter compellingly
invites us to encounter Dante anew as a poet who seeks to show his readers the whole
of reality while embracing, in wonder, its divine mystery.>> (Vittorio Montemaggi, Senior Lecturer in Religion and the Arts, King's College London,
author of Reading Dante's Commedia as Theology: Divinity Realized in Human Encounter)
<<Jason Baxter's new book provides the first extensive study of the tradition of the
imago mundi and its significance for Dante. Drawing on a wealth of materials - biblical
commentaries, glosses on ancient poets, spiritual treatises, and encyclopaedic works of
various kinds - Baxter explores how medieval culture developed a rich set of practices
of mental visualization so as to <see> the cosmos in its totality from above, and he shows
how Dante exploited such traditions. Elegantly written and richly documented, Baxter's
book offers an important new approach to Dante's encyclopedism.>> (Simon Gilson, Agnelli-Serena Professor of Italian, University of Oxford)
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
282 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78874-395-2 (9781788743952)
DOI
10.3726/b13440
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
09/2020
1st Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€69.49
Available for download

E-Book
09/2020
1st Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€69.49
Available for download
Person
Jason M. Baxter is Associate Professor of Humanities at Wyoming Catholic College. Trained at the University of Notre Dame, his research has focused on the Boethian commentary tradition, the twelfth-century poet, Bernard Silvestris, and the influence of Latin platonism on Dante. He is also author of the introductory A Beginner's Guide to the Divine Comedy, published in 2018.
Content
CONTENTS: From Macrobius's Sacrum Poema to Dante's Comedia - The View from Above and the Vision of the Heart - Universaliter et Membratim: The Imago Mundi and Dante's Volume - The Failed Encyclopedism of Hell - The Garden of Eden and the Universal Garden - Innominis/Omninominis: Dante, Mirrors, and the Infinite Names of God in Paradiso - Nova Creatura and Canticum Novum.