Episodes

EpisodeTitleFirst
Broadcast
RepeatedComments
01Inferno2021011120210907 (R4)Dante's 14th-century masterpiece reveals its 21st-century meanings to Katya Adler as she travels through the first region of the afterlife with Dr Margaret Keane.

Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy is commonly considered the greatest single work of all European literature, but this three-part epic poem isn't only for those with a taste for medieval Italy.

Seven hundred years after Dante's death in 1321, Katya Adler, the BBC's Europe Editor and lover of all things Italian, sets out to discover why the Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso are such key works for the 21st Century.

With Michael Sheen as Dante.

Three guides conduct Katya through their region of the afterlife - just as Virgil, and Dante's great lost love Beatrice, do in the original - taking her to Hell and back again.

Each guide proposes seven reasons why Dante (a great lover of numerology as well as a great poet) is such a powerful contemporary read - adding up to 21 reasons in the 21st year of the 21st century.

Just as Dante himself starts his iconic journey 'nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita / mi ritrovai per una selva oscura....', so Katya learns how, in the middle of the journey of our life, Dante might help us out of the current dark woods of Covid, the American election and post-Brexit polarisation, the environmental crisis and other troubles.... leading her to conclude that each of us contains a spark of Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso.

Specially commissioned music by Emily Levy, sung by Michael Solomon Williams, Jon Stainsby, Emily Levy.

Katya's guides are Dr Margaret Kean from St Hilda's College, Oxford; Professor Matthew Treherne from the Centre for Dante Studies, University of Leeds; Vittorio Montemaggi, senior lecturer in Religion and Art, Kings College London and Acting Director of the Von Hugel Institute in Cambridge.

Further contributions from Ken Hollings, Joseph Luzzi, Fatemeh Keshavarz, Alessio Baldini

Producer: Beaty Rubens

Dante's Divine Comedy mined for 21st-century meaning, by BBC Europe Editor Katya Adler.

Katya Adler goes in search of 21st-century meaning in Dante's 14th-century masterpiece.

022021011820210914 (R4)Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy is commonly considered the greatest single work of all European literature, but this three-part epic poem isn't only for those with a taste for medieval Italy.

Seven hundred years after Dante's death in 1321, Katya Adler, the BBC's Europe Editor and lover of all things Italian, sets out to discover why the Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso are such key works for the 21st century.

With Michael Sheen as Dante.

Three guides conduct Katya through their region of the afterlife - just as Virgil, and Dante's great lost love Beatrice, do in the original - taking her to hell and back again.

Each guide proposes seven reasons why Dante (a great lover of numerology as well as a great poet) is such a powerful contemporary read - adding up to 21 reasons in the 21st year of the 21st century.

2. Professor Matthew Treherne from the Centre for Dante Studies at the University of Leeds is Katya's guide through the second region of the afterlife - Purgatory. The author of a forthcoming book on 'Dante for the Twenty-First Century : Ecology, Finance and Time', Matthew explains to Katya why the roots of the 2008 financial crisis go right back to Dante's Florence, and he draws her attention to lessons we might learn in the era of Covid and political polarisation from Dante's depiction of the souls in Purgatory as they struggle to listen, change and make themselves anew.

Specially commissioned music by Emily Levy, sung by Michael Solomon Williams, Jon Stainsby and Emily Levy.

Further contributions from Joseph Luzzi, Professor of Comparative Literature and Faculty Member in Italian Studies at Bard College, USA, and author of five books including My Two Italies, and the deeply moving In a Dark Wood: What Dante Taught Me About Grief, Healing, and the Mysteries of Love

Italian readings by Alessio Baldini

Producer: Beaty Rubens

Dante's Divine Comedy mined for 21st-century meaning by BBC Europe Editor Katya Adler.

Katya Adler goes in search of 21st-century meaning in Dante's 14th-century masterpiece.

032021012520210921 (R4)Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy is commonly considered the greatest single work of all European literature, but this three-part epic poem isn't only for those with a taste for medieval Italy.

Seven hundred years after Dante's death in 1321, Katya Adler, the BBC's Europe Editor and lover of all things Italian, sets out to discover why the Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso are such key works for the 21st Century.

With Michael Sheen as Dante.

Three guides conduct Katya through their region of the afterlife - just as Virgil, and Dante's great lost love Beatrice, do in the original - taking her to hell and back again.

Each guide proposes seven reasons why Dante (a great lover of numerology as well as a great poet) is such a powerful contemporary read - adding up to 21 reasons in the 21st year of the 21st century.

3. Dr Vittorio Montemaggi, Senior Lecturer in Religion and the Arts at King's College, London, and Acting Director of the Von Huge Institute in Cambridge, is Katya's guide through Paradise. Although Paradiso is often considered the least appealing of Dante's three regions, Vittorio points out surprising resonances for today, and shares his own personal epiphany, experienced while reading Dante with inmates of a high-security prison, that we each carry within us a spark of Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso.

Specially commissioned music by Emily Levy, sung by Michael Solomon Williams, Jon Stainsby and Emily Levy.

Further contribtutions from Fatemeh Keshavarz, Professor of Persian Studies at the University of Maryland and presenter of podcast, Radio Rumi

Italian readings by Alession Baldini.

Producer: Beaty Rubens

Dante's Divine Comedy mined for 21st-century meaning by BBC Europe Editor Katya Adler.

Katya Adler goes in search of 21st-century meaning in Dante's 14th-century masterpiece.