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Corruption In Dante's Inferno

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Dante lived in a world where people fought for control over religions which is why he wrote the Inferno. In fact, because of this constant conflict, he was forced to leave the city of Florence and was never able to return. He wrote the Inferno during this time of exile. Dante wanted his story of condemned sinners to be as realistic and vivid as possible for he wanted to expose the flaws of his home country; also he wanted to help his people through these dark times of corrupt of power. This is why he would have chosen Gustave, rather than William Blake, to illustrate his work.

In order to convince the people of Italy to behave better, Dante had to send a warning in the Inferno that would stay in people's minds until the end of time. For that reason, his description of the terrible punishments suffered …show more content…

Blake's own take on the Minotaur is a good example on why his paintings would not have worked in the Inferno. Instead of appearing as a monstrous vicious beast with some kind of horrible affliction, Blake's Minotaur is a one-dimensional fairy-tale monster with no expression, who is set on causing destruction. On the left side of the painting, Virgil holds up his hand as though telling the beast to halt, although the lack of realism and emotion in his face makes it difficult to know what his purpose is or what he is feeling. Even in one of Blake's most realistic paintings, "The Punishment of the Thieves," one has to guess at what the sinners are feeling because their expressions are blank, and the snakes, with their unusually large eyes and heads, look like cartoons. The painting does have a dreamlike beauty to it, but Dante's Inferno was not written as a dream. It was written as a warning and as realistic as a writer could make a story out to

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