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 Undergraduate Course: Damnation and redemption in the medieval world: a journey through Dante's Inferno and Purgatorio (HIST10403)
Course Outline
| School | School of History, Classics and Archaeology | College | College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences |  
| Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 10 (Year 4 Undergraduate) | Availability | Not available to visiting students |  
| SCQF Credits | 40 | ECTS Credits | 20 |  
 
| Summary | The vision of the afterlife in Dante's Divine Comedy is an incredibly vivid, complex, timeless and vastly influential discussion of the meaning and purpose of human existence, encompassing politics, religion, emotions, society, along with intellectual and ethical ambitions. This course explores two of its realms, Inferno and Purgatorio, and the medieval world that inspired them. They respectively deal with eternal damnation and redemptive penitence by portraying Dante's encounters with a gallery of tragically flawed historical and mythological characters from the distant and recent past, who undergo diverse punishments for their sins in highly imaginative settings. |  
| Course description | The Divine Comedy has been described as a compendium of medieval culture, but it is also one of its most long-term influential works. While death and ideas on afterlife were at the centre of life in the Middle Ages, Dante's Divine Comedy is not only the most complex and articulated narrative about the afterlife, the high point of an age-old tradition, but it also addresses both the learned and popular sides of the Christian community. At the same time, the Divine Comedy has been exerting a profound influence to this day over authors, thinkers and artists. Of the three sections of the Divine Comedy, that is, Inferno, Purgatory and Paradise, the first two have always been overwhelmingly favoured because they are very dramatic and their gallery of complex, flawed and colourful inhabitants. Dante's journey through Hell and Purgatory amounts to an historical archive of evils and sins ordered according to type and severity as reflected in their settings and punishments. Yet those evils are embodied by historical and mythological individuals and by the far from clear-cut stories which they recount about their deaths. The programme closely reflects the structure of Dante's Inferno and Purgatory, which are explored in the first and second semester respectively: after an introductory session providing guidance, each seminar explores one section of those two realms of the afterlife (which in turn represent different categories of sinners). Each seminar will include the reading, discussion and contextualisation of one or more of their cantos. The last seminar of each semester will explore the legacy of Dante's work. 
 Syllabus:
 
 Semester 1: Inferno
 
 1.	Introduction: Dante, the Divine Comedy and the threshold of Hell
 2.	1st circle: Limbo
 3.	2nd circle: Lust
 4.	3rd circle: Gluttony
 5.	4th circle: Greed
 6.	5th circle: Anger
 7.	6th circle: Heresy
 8.	7th circle: Violence
 9.	8th circle: Fraud
 10.	9th circle: Treachery
 11.	The legacy of Dante's inferno
 
 Semester 2: Purgatorio
 12.	 Ante-Purgatory: The beach of Mount Purgatory
 13.	 Ante-Purgatory 2: Negligence and last minute repentance
 14.	Terrace 1: Pride
 15.	Terrace 2: Envy
 16.	Terrace 3: Anger
 17.	Terrace 4: Sloth
 18.	Terrace 5: Avarice
 19.	Terrace 6: Gluttony
 20.	Terrace 7: Lust
 21.	The Garden of Earthly Paradise
 22.	The legacy of Dante's Purgatorio
 
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Course Delivery Information
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| Academic year 2021/22, Not available to visiting students (SS1) | Quota:  0 |  | Course Start | Full Year |  Timetable | Timetable | 
| Learning and Teaching activities (Further Info) | Total Hours:
400
(
 Seminar/Tutorial Hours 44,
 Programme Level Learning and Teaching Hours 8,
Directed Learning and Independent Learning Hours
348 ) |  
| Assessment (Further Info) | Written Exam
0 %,
Coursework
80 %,
Practical Exam
20 % |  
 
| Additional Information (Assessment) | Coursework: 4 x 3,000 word essay (80%)
 
 Non-written skills:
 Presentation (20%)
 
 
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| Feedback | Students are encouraged to design their own essay topics and they will receive formative feedback on a plan and a bibliography prior to submission of the essay. Students will receive written feedback on their coursework, and will have the opportunity to discuss that feedback further with the Course Organiser during their published office hours or by appointment. |  
| No Exam Information |  
Learning Outcomes 
| On completion of this course, the student will be able to: 
        Demonstrate command of the body of knowledge considered in the courseRead, analyse and reflect critically upon relevant scholarshipUnderstand, evaluate and utilize a variety of primary source materialDevelop and sustain scholarly arguments in oral and written form, by formulating appropriate questions and utilizing evidenceDemonstrate independence of mind and initiative, intellectual integrity and maturity, an ability to evaluate the work of others, including peers. |  
Reading List 
| The text and commentary of the Divine Comedy is available online in the Princeton Dante Project: http://etcweb.princeton.edu/dante/pdp/ P. Hainsworth and D. Robey, Dante: a very short introduction (Oxford, 2015).
 R. Swanson, Religion and devotion in Europe, 1215-1515 (Cambridge, 1995).
 R. Jacoff (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Dante (Cambridge, 2007), ebook.
 R. Lansing (ed.), The Dante Encyclopedia (Garland, 2000).
 J. R. Woodhouse, Dante and governance (Oxford, 1997) ebook.
 P. Boyde, Human vices and human worth in Dante's Comedy (Cambridge, 2006).
 A. Morgan, Dante and the medieval other world (Cambridge, 1990).
 N. R. Havely, Dante's British public readers and texts, from the fourteenth century to the present (Oxford, 2014) ebook.
 H. Bloom, The western canon: the books and school of the ages (London, 1995).
 The Cambridge history of Christianity, volume 4: Christianity in Western Europe, c. 1100-1500 (Cambridge, 2010), ebook.
 The Central Middle Ages: 950-1320, ed. D. Power (Oxford, 2006).
 
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Additional Information
| Graduate Attributes and Skills | ability to draw valid conclusions about the past ability to identify, define and analyse historical  problems
 ability to select and apply a variety of critical approaches to problems informed by uneven evidence
 ability to exercise critical judgement in creating new understanding
 ability to extract key elements from complex information
 readiness and capacity to ask key questions and exercise rational enquiry
 ability critically to assess existing understanding and the limitations of knowledge and recognition of the need regularly to challenge/test knowledge
 ability to search for, evaluate and use information to develop knowledge and understanding
 possession of an informed respect for the principles, methods, standards, values and boundaries of the discipline(s), as well as the capacity to question these
 recognition of the importance of reflecting on one's learning experiences and being aware of one's own particular learning style
 openness to new ideas, methods and ways of thinking
 ability to identify processes and strategies for learning
 independence as a learner, with readiness to take responsibility for one's own learning, and commitment to continuous reflection, self-evaluation and self-improvement
 ability to make decisions on the basis of rigorous and independent thought.
 ability to test, modify and strengthen one's own views through collaboration and debate
 intellectual curiosity
 ability to sustain intellectual interest
 ability to make effective use of oral, written and visual means convey understanding of historical issues and one's interpretation of them.
 ability to marshal argument lucidly and coherently
 ability to collaborate and to relate to others
 readiness to seek and value open feedback to inform genuine self-awareness
 ability to articulate one's skills as identified through self-reflection
 ability to approach historical problems with academic rigour
 ability to manage and meet firm deadlines
 flexible, adaptable and proactive responsiveness to changing surroundings
 possession of the confidence to make decisions based on one's understanding and personal/intellectual autonomy
 ability to transfer knowledge, learning, skills and abilities flexibly from one context to another
 ability to work effectively with others, capitalising on diversities of thinking, experience and skills
 working with, managing, and leading others in ways that value their diversity and equality and that encourage their contribution
 
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| Keywords | Damnation |  
Contacts 
| Course organiser | Dr Gianluca Raccagni Tel:
 Email: gianluca.raccagni@ed.ac.uk
 | Course secretary | Miss Annabel Stobie Tel: (0131 6)50 3783
 Email: Annabel.Stobie@ed.ac.uk
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