Jiang endorses the student's sense that the Ganymede story is creepy and coercive, using its abduction logic to explain why Dante experiences Lucia's help as unsettling rather than soothing.
Topic brief
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Abduction
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Um, because the story of Ganymede is kind of creepy to me, because he was like, kidnapped by the eagle. Yes. And he became..."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Um, because the story of Ganymede is kind of creepy to me, because he was like, kidnapped by the eagle. Yes. And he became..."
Key Notes
Timestamped Evidence
"Um, because the story of Ganymede is kind of creepy to me, because he was like, kidnapped by the eagle. Yes. And he became..."
"Yeah, that's exactly right. The dream is making him afraid, right? Do you understand? The dream isn't like, oh wow, Lucia came to like,..."
"The medieval mythos of saving and abduction or saving the princess."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of a five-hour hybrid workshop that begins with Macbeth and ends by turning Purgatory, free will, tragedy, envy, and generosity into one model of human transformation.
Jiang turns late Inferno and early Purgatorio into a struggle over imagination itself.
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