William Blake, Dante, and Images of Inversion in Inferno

Authors

  • Rachelle Burnside Stanford University

Keywords:

William Blake, Dante, Divine Comedy, Inferno

Abstract

William Blake and Dante were in agreement that the contemporary Christian church - to quote Blake - “Crucifie[d] Christ with the Head Downwards.” Despite their theological differences, both poets used imagery of inversion when denouncing religious institutions or concepts. By examining instances where Blake has used images of physically inverted bodies in his own illuminated works, and then connecting that imagery with his illustrations to key cantos of Inferno, it is possible to trace when Blake is rejecting Dante’s vision and when he is in unison with Dante’s criticism of the Christian Church.

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Author Biography

Rachelle Burnside, Stanford University

Rachelle Burnside is the English Language Teacher on Special Assignment and AVID Coordinator at Branham High School in San Jose. She also teaches AP Literature and Composition and ELD. She holds bachelor’s degrees in English and history from Santa Clara University and has just completed  her second year in the MLA program at Stanford.

References

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Published

2019-01-29

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Articles