Heather Webb
Professor of Italian Studies at Yale University
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Books by Heather Webb
La traduzione dell'opera è stata realizzata grazie al contributo del SEPS - SEGRETARIATO EUROPEO PER LE PUBBLICAZIONI SCIENTIFICHE
Webb focuses on the strategies the Commedia employs to call us to collaborate in the mutual construction of persons. As we engage with the dead that inhabit its pages, we continue to maintain the personhood of those dead. Webb investigates Dante's implicit and explicit appeals to his readers to act in relation to the characters in his otherworlds as if they were persons. Moving through the various encounters of Purgatorio and Paradiso, this study documents the ways in which characters are presented as persone in development or in a state of plenitude through attention to the 'corporeal' modes of smiles, gazes, gestures, and postures. Dante's journey provides a model for the formation and maintenance of a network of personal attachments, attachments that, as constitutive of persona, are not superseded even in the presence of the direct vision of God
This collection – to be issued in three volumes – offers an unprecedented repertoire of vertical readings for the whole poem. As the first volume exemplifies, vertical reading not only articulates unexamined connections between the three canticles but also unlocks engaging new ways to enter into core concerns of the poem. The three volumes thereby provide an indispensable resource for scholars, students and enthusiasts of Dante.
The book is available to read free online at the link in this entry.
Papers by Heather Webb
Malgrado ovvie contraddizioni tra i rispettivi pensieri politici, questo saggio prende in considerazione il legame, sensibile e produttivo, che Hannah Arendt instaura nei confronti di Dante ; muovendo dal brano della Monarchia citato nell’opera di Arendt The Human Condition (1958), si esamineranno le idee della filosofa tedesca a proposito di nozioni quali pluralità, azione e diletto rispetto alla costruzione dantesca dei medesimi concetti, nella prospettiva in cui entrambi i pensatori si adoperano per immaginare cosa possa tenere insieme la comunità umana.
sollecitati dal testo a visualizzare vari stati corporei che, insieme all’ermeneutica dell’intertestualità, suggeriscono modalità di condotta (comportamentale, filosofica, politica, etica, spirituale) in grado di rivisitare le tipologie di postura attinenti al mondo classico. In questi canti dell’Antipurgatorio, possiamo discernere lo sforzo di stabilire un equilibrio tra due poli: da un lato, le virtù classiche della verticalità, del magnanimo, e della stabilità della linea retta; dall’altro, un nuovo schema di modelli cristiani di movimento responsivo verso l’altro.
have taken within the discipline from a chronological perspective. The first
section explores how critical frameworks relating to embodiment, performativity and affect expand premodern Italian studies beyond the limited patriarchal canon and better understand ‘performances’ of the Passion by late medieval and early modern women religious as a form of co-suffering that foregrounds embodiment as discourse and substitute for silenced female voices. This is followed by a detailed reflection on how modern understandings of biopolitics and its technologies, mass demo-graphic mobility, and contemporary discourses on race and gender effect a shift away from binary modes of categorisation and critical understandings of the body to produce alternative forms of knowledge and more complex understandings of the symbolic figuration of the body as an object of national concern. https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/XAJSIX5PIFXGCEQJQFQV/full?target=10.1080/00751634.2020.1744866
qui suggerire, invece, che i vari episodi di rossore sono parte di una vasta coreografia di segni somatici che attraversa la Commedia. Il saggio fornisce un’analisi che metta in luce le modalità attraverso le quali uno specifico segnale fisico possa essere finalizzato ad agire sul lettore in
termini emotivi.
La traduzione dell'opera è stata realizzata grazie al contributo del SEPS - SEGRETARIATO EUROPEO PER LE PUBBLICAZIONI SCIENTIFICHE
Webb focuses on the strategies the Commedia employs to call us to collaborate in the mutual construction of persons. As we engage with the dead that inhabit its pages, we continue to maintain the personhood of those dead. Webb investigates Dante's implicit and explicit appeals to his readers to act in relation to the characters in his otherworlds as if they were persons. Moving through the various encounters of Purgatorio and Paradiso, this study documents the ways in which characters are presented as persone in development or in a state of plenitude through attention to the 'corporeal' modes of smiles, gazes, gestures, and postures. Dante's journey provides a model for the formation and maintenance of a network of personal attachments, attachments that, as constitutive of persona, are not superseded even in the presence of the direct vision of God
This collection – to be issued in three volumes – offers an unprecedented repertoire of vertical readings for the whole poem. As the first volume exemplifies, vertical reading not only articulates unexamined connections between the three canticles but also unlocks engaging new ways to enter into core concerns of the poem. The three volumes thereby provide an indispensable resource for scholars, students and enthusiasts of Dante.
The book is available to read free online at the link in this entry.
Malgrado ovvie contraddizioni tra i rispettivi pensieri politici, questo saggio prende in considerazione il legame, sensibile e produttivo, che Hannah Arendt instaura nei confronti di Dante ; muovendo dal brano della Monarchia citato nell’opera di Arendt The Human Condition (1958), si esamineranno le idee della filosofa tedesca a proposito di nozioni quali pluralità, azione e diletto rispetto alla costruzione dantesca dei medesimi concetti, nella prospettiva in cui entrambi i pensatori si adoperano per immaginare cosa possa tenere insieme la comunità umana.
sollecitati dal testo a visualizzare vari stati corporei che, insieme all’ermeneutica dell’intertestualità, suggeriscono modalità di condotta (comportamentale, filosofica, politica, etica, spirituale) in grado di rivisitare le tipologie di postura attinenti al mondo classico. In questi canti dell’Antipurgatorio, possiamo discernere lo sforzo di stabilire un equilibrio tra due poli: da un lato, le virtù classiche della verticalità, del magnanimo, e della stabilità della linea retta; dall’altro, un nuovo schema di modelli cristiani di movimento responsivo verso l’altro.
have taken within the discipline from a chronological perspective. The first
section explores how critical frameworks relating to embodiment, performativity and affect expand premodern Italian studies beyond the limited patriarchal canon and better understand ‘performances’ of the Passion by late medieval and early modern women religious as a form of co-suffering that foregrounds embodiment as discourse and substitute for silenced female voices. This is followed by a detailed reflection on how modern understandings of biopolitics and its technologies, mass demo-graphic mobility, and contemporary discourses on race and gender effect a shift away from binary modes of categorisation and critical understandings of the body to produce alternative forms of knowledge and more complex understandings of the symbolic figuration of the body as an object of national concern. https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/XAJSIX5PIFXGCEQJQFQV/full?target=10.1080/00751634.2020.1744866
qui suggerire, invece, che i vari episodi di rossore sono parte di una vasta coreografia di segni somatici che attraversa la Commedia. Il saggio fornisce un’analisi che metta in luce le modalità attraverso le quali uno specifico segnale fisico possa essere finalizzato ad agire sul lettore in
termini emotivi.
La lezione è tenuta da Heather Webb, professoressa di Letteratura italiana alla University of Cambridge. Introduce Paolo Di Stefano, giornalista del Corriere della Sera. Letture di Valeria Perdonò de Il Menu della Poesia.
L'incontro è stato realizzato il 12 marzo con il contributo di Intesa Sanpaolo e con il patrocinio del Comitato Nazionale per la celebrazione dei 700 anni dalla morte di Dante Alighieri.
La proposta di una giornata dedicata al poeta è nata nei mesi scorsi sulle pagine del Corriere della Sera.
The conference aims to promote a fruitful dialogue on the perception and the representation of emotions between scholars working across different periods and different media. It will investigate how emotional repertoires and vocabularies for identifying affects and sensations evolved and changed in Italian language, literature, and the visual arts, from medieval to contemporary production. In order to further enrich the discussion, the conference will include comparative sessions with colleagues working on other languages and literatures, thus offering a comprehensive overview of ‘Italian’ thought before, after, and beyond the concretization of national boundaries.
The conference is organised by Heather Webb, Aistė Kiltinavičiūtė, Nicolò Crisafi, Alessia Carrai, Giulia Boitani, George Rayson, and Orsolya Petocz.
placing depictions of posture in Dante’s work within medieval cultural contexts;
analysis of postures in manuscript illuminations and other selected illustrations, sculptures, and filmic versions of the Comedy;
study of the embodiment of postures through staging selected episodes and consequent analysis by means of acting theory, kinesis, and concepts derived from recent work in neuroscience.
The conference focused on two principal questions:
1. By means of conceptual tools from neuroscience, can we put modes of reading posture that range from performance to illustration to adaptation to criticism (to conversion – Dante’s endgame) into productive dialogue?
2. How does the work of visualising postures - as described, analysed, illustrated, or embodied - enable new approaches to intersubjectivity, reception, and interpretation?
Chair: Manuele Gragnolati (Somerville College, Oxford)
This panel will explore the intersections of physicality, materiality and strategies of representation in the works of Dante. From the rhetorical garments in the Vita Nova, via the rhetorics of physical bodies and their penances in Purgatorio, to the corporeality of faces and forms of presence in the Paradiso, the speakers will explore the manners in which the material and the matter of the text interact.
Beginning with the pre-Commedia works, David Bowe’s paper, ‘Writing as bodies as writing’, will explore the notion that garments, written words, and bodies exist in a creative tension fundamental to Dantean textuality. In the Vita nova the ‘sacrificial’ red of Beatrice’s garments (Cervigni) intersects with the red ink of rubrication and ordinatio in the libello. This, in turn activates the images of poetic writing as dressing the (female) body of intendimento in VN XXV in the specific context of Dante’s textual and poetic practice. By examining these intersections this paper will shed light on the sort of material concern for the body as text which later resurface in Dante’s Convivio and Commedia.
Nicolò Crisafi’s paper, ‘Spiritual fires and literal bodies: the rhetorics of corporal punishment’, will then proceed to Purgatorio to chart the relationship between secular rhetorics of corporal punishment and the Commedia’s own rhetorical treatment of the bodies of sinners in Dante’s otherworld. The rhetorics of corporal punishment in medieval secular justice often charged literal bodies with a symbolic meaning. The Commedia responds to these rhetorics of corporal punishment and stages its own. Focussing largely on Dante’s treatment of sexual sinners, this paper will look at the interplay between the literal and the metaphorical when it comes to the body and its otherworldly punishments, by providing a close reading of the rhetorical figures at play in Dante’s poetic text.
Ascending to the third realm of Dante’s afterlife, Heather Webb’s paper, ‘On the Materiality of the Face in Dante’s Paradiso’ begins from the assertion that faces in Paradiso do what bodies do in Inferno and Purgatorio. As David Ruzicka points out, we have long assumed that all those references to Beatrice's eyes and mouth mean that she is decorporealised. But bodies remain crucial in Paradiso; if, as Robin Kirkpatrick suggests, bodies in Purgatorio are ‘all face’, then we might argue that faces in Paradiso are bodies. This paper focusses on the materiality of the Veronica, the physicality of Beatrice’s face, and modes of personal presence in Paradiso.
Spanning a range of Dante’s works, this panel will offer a broad overview of the textual representations of physical bodies and material cultures.
Registration fee £2 [members of Pembroke College Cambridge will be refunded at the entrance]; the keynote is free to attend and pre–registration is not required.
The event is sponsored by Pembroke College; the Keith Sykes Research Fund; and CIRN (Cambridge Italian Research Network)
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This two-day symposium brings together international experts working at the crossroads of disciplines including Philosophy, Law, Art History and Literature, to provide an assessment of the use and regulation of languages of injury in late medieval Italy (e.g. insults, offensive paintings, injurious poems, satirical writing, beffe, tenzoni, libelli famosi, and others). Particular attention will be paid to moral doctrines (e.g. the sins of the tongue), legal theories and practices connected to non-physical violence in Italian communes and city states (e.g. jurisdiction on the crimes of insult and of lèse-majesté, pitture infamanti, libel writs, and others). The symposium will include presentations on art and social control, censorship, gender and insults, contested images, and defamation laws.
PROGRAMME
30th April 2018
Old Library, Pembroke College, Cambridge
2 p.m. Refreshments and registration
2.30 p.m. Opening remarks
3 p.m. First Panel : Legal Perspectives, chaired by Trevor Dean (Professor of Social History, University of Roehampton)
* Hannah Skoda (Professor of History, University of Oxford), 'Languages of Injury in Late Medieval Universities'
* Giuliano Milani (Professor d’Histoire du Moyen Âge, Université Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée), 'Impotenti, debitori, ladroni e usurai. Fonti giudiziarie e fonti letterarie a confronto'
* Lorenzo Caravaggi (DPhil History Candidate, Balliol College, University of Oxford), 'Rituals of Affront in the City and Contado: an Interpersonal Perspective (late XIII century)'
4.30 p.m. Coffee Break
5 p.m. KEYNOTE ADDRESS
* Justin Steinberg (Professor of Italian Literature, University of Chicago), 'The Artist and the Police: Decameron 8.3’
1st May 2018
Old Library, Pembroke College, Cambridge
9 a.m. Coffee and biscuits
9.30 a.m. Second Panel : Visual Perspectives, chaired by Irene Galandra Cooper (Research Associate, ERC-funded project Genius Before Romanticism: Ingenuity in Early Modern Art and Science, CRASSH, University of Cambridge)
* Andrew Chen (Fellow, John’s College, University of Cambridge), 'Staging Enemies in Text and Image: Comforting Rituals in Emilia'
* Felix Jäger (Doctoral Assistant, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz – Max-Planck-Institut), 'The Silence of the Sirens: Infamy and Political Reason in the Armor of the Negroli’
* Melissa Vise (Somsen Fellow, IRH, University of Wisconsin), 'Crimes Against Art: Blasphemy in Fourteenth-Century Bologna'
11 a.m. Coffee Break
11.15 a.m. Third Panel : Literary Perspectives, chaired by Heather Webb (Reader in Medieval Italian Literature and Culture, University of Cambridge)
* Maggie Fritz-Morkin (Assistant Professor of Italian, The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill), '"Totum tribunal inplevit": Petrarch, Cicero, and the Politics of Public Vomiting'
* Cécile Le Lay (Maître de conférences de Langue et Littérature italiennes, Université Jean Moulin - Lyon 3), 'Funzione giuridica della maledizione: le ultime parole di Beatrice (Paradiso XXX, 139-148)'
* Ambrogio Camozzi Pistoja (Keith Sykes Fellow, Pembroke College, University of Cambridge), ‘"Poesia Giocosa" in Late Medieval Tuscany: Law and Art'
For more info: Dr Ambrogio Camozzi Pistoja, ac654@cam.ac.uk
Il convegno si svolgerà sabato 11 novembre.
Interverranno: Luca Azzetta, Elisa Brilli, Sergio Cristaldi, Giuseppe Ledda, Nicolò Maldina, Paola Nasti, Anna Rodolfi, Francesco Santi, Heather Webb, Robert Wilson.
Interventi di Sergio Cristaldi, Anna Rodolfi, Heather Webb, Francesco Santi, Paola Nasti, Luca Azzetta, Nicolò Maldina, Giuseppe Ledda.