Contrapasso, Violence, and Madness in Dante’s The Divine Comedy and Westworld

Author:

Schmid Alexander Eliot1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Comparative Literature Program and Political Science Department, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70808, USA

Abstract

The medieval epic poem, The Divine Comedy, and Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy’s prestige drama, Westworld, have more in common than at first meets the eye. Both represent hellish and purgatorial geographies, both physical and psychological. And both share the view that what is regularly considered “perfect liberty”, or the liberty to indulge in any and every desire one wishes to with impunity, is in fact a form of slavery, as argued by Aristotle. Both the denizens in Dante’s Inferno and the guests in Westworld’s park, therefore, are ensnared by their own desires. This article will consider the structure of Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy and Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy’s hit HBO show Westworld, which I will argue takes parts of its structure consciously from Dante’s The Divine Comedy. And though at the outset, the two works of art appear dissimilar, the theologically and philosophically infused medieval Catholic-Italian poetry of Dante and the sensuous, nihilistic, and provocative story-telling of Jonathan Nolan’s recent work on the generation and expression of consciousness, ultimately what they share is similarity in structure and an agreement on the connection between activity, suffering, madness, perfection, consciousness, and freedom of the will from sin.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference39 articles.

1. Alighieri, Dante (1995). The Divine Comedy, Knopf. Translated and Notes by Allen Mandelbaum and Peter Armour.

2. Aquinas, Thomas (2024, August 13). Summa Theologiae: The State of Perfection in General (Secunda Secundae Partis, Q. 184). Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province. Available online: http://www.newadvent.org/summa/3184.htm.

3. Barnes, Jonathan (1995). The Complete Works of Aristotle, Princeton University Press.

4. Barolini, Teodolinda (1992). The Undivine Comedy, Princeton University Press.

5. Dante e la decima Musa: La prima versione cinematografica dell’Inferno;Bellomo;MLN,2019

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