Mapping the Afterlife
English

About The Book

There are very few accounts of the afterlife across the period from Homer to Dante. Most traditional studies approach the classical afterlife from the point of view of its evolution towards the Christian afterlife. This book tries to do something different: to explore afterlife narratives in spatial terms and to situate this tradition within the ambit of a fundamental need in human psychology for the synthesis of soul (or self) and universe. <p/>Drawing on the works of Homer Plato Cicero Virgil and Dante among others as well as on modern works on psychology cartography and music theory <em>Mapping the Afterlife</em> argues that the topography of the afterlife in the Greek and Roman tradition and in Dante reflects the state of scientific knowledge at the time of the various contexts in which we find it. The book posits that there is a dominant spatial idiom in afterlife landscapes a journey-vision paradigm--the horizontal journey of the soul across the afterlife landscape and a synoptic vision of the universe. Many scholars have argued that the vision of the universe is out of place in the underworld landscape. However looking across the entire tradition we find that afterlife landscapes almost without exception contain these two kinds of space in one form or another. This double vision of space brings the underworld as the landscape of the soul into contact with the scientific universe; and brings humanity into line with the cosmos.<br>
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