Dante's Nonlinear Exemplarity

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A01=Ambrogio Camozzi Pistoja
Alexander the Great
Author_Ambrogio Camozzi Pistoja
Category=DS
Category=DSBB
Category=DSM
Convivio (Banquet)
Dante Alighieri
De Vulgari Eloquentia
didactic failure
Divine Comedy
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
exemplarity
fame and power
forthcoming
medieval didacticism
medieval rhetoric
Monarchia
wealth and authority

Product details

  • ISBN 9781049804941
  • Weight: 1g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: University of Toronto Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Examples promise order: they clarify, they instruct, they normalize. Yet in Dante they often falter. Dante’s Nonlinear Exemplarity follows these moments of didactic failure, when the mediation between the universal and the particular breaks down, and the most ordinary of rhetorical tools raises doubts about the truths it is meant to secure.

The book traces Dante’s uses of examples across the major works of his maturity – De Vulgari Eloquentia, Banquet, Monarchia, and Comedy – through a single, revealing figure: Alexander the Great. One of only four historical characters to appear in all four texts, Alexander enters Dante’s writing in exemplifications that begin conventionally, then veers off course. Read together, these moments form a through-line for Dante’s evolving reflections on fame, wealth, power, pedagogy, and the instability of language itself.

Combining philology, close reading, and cultural history, Dante’s Nonlinear Exemplarity starts from these unstable examples to open up alternative ways of reading the works in which they appear. Each time, form and function pull apart, forcing Dante’s readers to supply coherence themselves and exposing the assumptions they bring to the text. What emerges is a poetics of uncertainty that unsettles standard views of medieval didacticism and reframes how Dante’s major works—and exemplarity itself before Boccaccio – produce meaning.

Ambrogio Camozzi Pistoja is the Roy G. Clouse Associate Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures (Italian) at Harvard University

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