Ovid: The Poet and His Work

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Cornell University Press, 2002 - 217 páginas

The Roman poet Ovid is enjoying a renaissance. Though relegated to the margins in the Romantic period, since the mid-1980s he has become popular again, not only with classicists and other lovers of ancient poetry, but also with poets and prose writers. He himself is the protagonist of a number of recent novels and stories, including Jane Alison's The Love Artist, Derek Mahon's Ovid in Tomis, and David Malouf's An Imaginary Life. Ovid's greatest work, the Metamorphoses, has inspired authors such as Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes to publish retellings of certain of his stories of transformation.

The distinguished classicist Niklas Holzberg offers a highly readable, concise yet comprehensive overview of all of Ovid's varied works, giving each stage of Ovid's career its due and allowing no text to be diminished by serving as a prelude or epilogue to others. In addition, Holzberg's own insightful, frequently witty observations infuse the book, resulting in a rounded vision of a storyteller Holzberg finds to be distinctly modern.

 

Contenido

The Elegiac System
10
From Little Wax Tablets to the Royal Codex
27
The Amores
46
Farewell to Two Mistresses
60
Heroines in Three Pentads
77
The Ars Amatoria
92
Womanipulation
103
What Besides Crimen Is Concealed in Carmen?
111
From Troy to Rome and From There to Eternity
137
Augustus and the Power of Metamorphosis
147
From Janus to Terminus and Beyond
155
Mars without and Venus with Arms
161
SummanusWhoever That Is
167
Ovid and the Power of the Calendar
173
What Losing Ones Tongue Leads
188
But That Is Hardly Enough to Shake a Naso
196

Chaos Cosmos Eros and Chaos Again
118
Framing Heroes and Frothing Heroines
128

Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (2002)

Niklas Holzberg is Professor of Classics at the University of Munich and the author of numerous books, including The Ancient Novel: An Introduction. G. M. Goshgarian is the translator of several books from Cornell, including The Jew and the Other and Three Women in Dark Times: Edith Stein, Hannah Arendt, and Simone Weil.

Información bibliográfica