Goodreads: Dante’s Daughter
Series: None
Published: 2004
Source: Library
Summary: Antonia Alighieri’s world turns
upside down when the Black Guelfs invade Florence and force her family into
exile. Separated from her mother and her
brothers, Antonia travels with her father, the famous poet Dante, through Italy
and France. The people she meets and the
places she experiences will help her find her own place in the world and give
her the courage to follow her dreams.
Review: Heuston paints a vivid picture of
pre-Renaissance Italy, taking the few known facts about Antonia’s life and transforming
them into a story sure to inspire readers and warm their hearts. Though she writes about the daughter of a man
who will one day be recognized as one of the world’s greatest poets, Heuston
does not allow Dante—or the political forces surrounding him—to overshadow her
protagonist. Anotonia has her own life,
her own needs, and her own vision. Her
navigation through adolescence and young adulthood in a male-dominated world will
resonate with readers long after they close the book.
Since historians know so little about Dante’s family,
Heuston had a liberal amount of poetic license with which to work while writing
Dante’s Daughter. My limited understanding of Dante suggests,
however, that Heuston stayed remarkably true to those facts even while she used
them to make assumptions about the way in which events may have unfolded. Thus, Heuston utilizes speculations about an
unhappy marriage between Dante and his wife Gemma (in part due to his poetry
about another woman—Beatrice) to create a fully three-dimensional woman who
feels hurt by her husband’s emotional betrayal yet still provides for her
family and their interests. The dynamic
between them drives a lot of the story and provides for some interesting speculations
about the how a man so preoccupied by intellectual pursuits may have related to
others.
Dante springs to life as a complex man who loves his
family, but whose idealism and divine inspiration sometimes cause him to
neglect the worldly sorts of tasks that might keep them fed and clothed. Antonia loves her father in return and craves
his affection and protection, but finds that he has difficulty relating to
her. In part, the book suggests, Dante
lived too much on his own to understand the needs of others, especially
children. However, Dante does not only
experience difficulty in speaking to Antonia simply because she is a child, but
also because she is a woman. She, like
him, possesses a quick wit and a keen sensitivity for beauty, but she lacks his
education. There exists between them a
fundamental inability to communicate because Dante thinks in terms of the great
poets and philosophers who came before him—and Antonia does not yet know them
all.
Dante’s attitude toward his family—particularly his wife
and daughter—thus serves as a springboard for reflections on gender roles. As the daughter of a great poet, Antonia will
learn Latin, hear the stories from Virgil, and even learn to paint. However, she remains a woman, and society
expects her not to create great art like her father, but to make a home and
care for a family. She does not deny
this calling, or even its validity (Antonia’s aunt in fact provides a lively
defense of the occupation of women in her society, asserting that men can
accomplish so much intellectual work only because the woman take care of their
practical needs). However, she does
recognize her need to find her own calling, rather than to follow the path laid
out for her by others.
Heuston’s nuanced and varied depiction of woman is
completely refreshing. She presents a
wide spectrum of strong women, from Antonia’s aunt who loves being a wife and
mother to the Beguines, a group of lay Christian women who lived apart from men
and could earn their own livelihood. All
of these women have different gifts and different strengths; Heuston does not
assert the primacy of one vocation over another, but illustrates the various
ways women can serve God and others.
Antonia ultimately takes the best from all these women, forging her own
destiny where she can love freely and be true to herself.
Dante's Daughter possesses a rare beauty, bringing to life a fascinating woman who chose to accept her struggles and use them to make herself stronger. This book will leave readers feeling refreshed and inspired.
0 comments:
Post a Comment