Mark Scarbrough

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INFERNO, Episode 54. Where Is My Son? A Thematic And Structural Overview Of Inferno, Canto X

Let’s step back and look at the whole of INFERNO, Canto X (even though we haven’t quite finished it). It’s overall structure is a chiasmus, a crossing. And at the fulcrum of that crossing is Cavalcante, not Farinata.

It’s easy to become obsessed with Farinata. He’s a giant of history. He’s talkative (in his own courtly way). He’s Stoic. He’s Greco-Roman. He’s austere. But he may not be the true heart of this difficult canto.

It may well be Cavalcante. And mostly, his horrifying question: “Where is my son?”

Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I take a step back from the line-by-line analysis of canto X and look at it as a whole. I think we may discover something about Dante’s conception of the self. That is, the way we must choose between journeying and stasis.

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There’s no specific passage for this episode. If you want, look back at my English translation of this passage in previous episodes/blog entries.