Examines Dante's theories concerning the nature of light and vision, and the imagery and narrative situations in his poetry, where, for example, "verdere" and "luce" are among the most frequent and distinctive terms. Topics in part one include the science of light, vision, and optics in the 13th century; optics and vision before the Comedy ; and aspects of vision, light reflection, mirrors, and meteorological optics in the Comedy . Part two addresses Dante's metaphysics of light, light in the cosmos and in God's creation, and the relationship between Dante's work and theological writings on the nature of light as applied, say, to angels and the Empyrean. An interesting bibliographic feature lists the principal optical works available in Dante's time. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
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This study investigates Dante's knowledge of several traditions of the extensive medieval literature on light and optics and examines how he assimilates and reworks related imagery, themes, and motifs in his writing.
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