Ovid’s treatment of the Magna Mater festival in Fasti Book 4 resonates significantly both with his earlier work and with his exile poetry. The episode offers more than one potential figure, it is argued, for the poet and his traumatic experience of punishment at the hands of the emperor. Some significant parallels might prompt readers to perceive an analogy between Ovid, whose experience of exile is repeatedly figured as a painful wound, and Attis, the castrated acolyte of the Magna Mater. More compelling ultimately is the parallel between Ovid and Claudia Quinta, whose reputation, wrongly impugned, is vindicated by the goddess
Ovid's Fasti must be understood as participating in both the Callimachean tradition of learned poetr...
Anti-Augustan readings dominate the scholarship on Fasti 3.697–710. This thesis challenges these ant...
Stephen Hinds has demonstrated, through analysis of the deeply intertextual relationship between Ovi...
This dissertation studies Ovid’s Fasti and contemporary Augustan Rome. In this poem, Ovid provides e...
Previous scholarship has laid out some important groundwork on Ovid\u27s use of Callimachus\u27 Aeti...
The traditionally harmonious Muses disagree on the etymology of the month May at the beginning of Ov...
In Ovid’s Fasti, the rape narratives of Callisto, Lara, Flora, and Carna contain the common themes o...
Until the late Twentieth Century Fasti was arguably Ovid’s least favoured extant work. Fasti was ext...
In the opening of Fasti 6, Ovid proposes different explanations for the origin of the month name Jun...
During the crisis of the Republic, the founder of Rome became the symbol of a cold-blooded and unscr...
Long-term neglect combined with intermittent crude misinterpretation distorted the reputation of Ovi...
Ovid’s Fasti can be seen as the pivotal work of his career. It was composed alongside the Metamorph...
2018-08-07This dissertation offers a literary, historical, and cultural analysis of Ovid’s “Epistula...
The paper studies the possible relationship between Ovid's difficult political situation and the com...
Despite the prevailing interest in authority in Ovidian studies, studies have often focussed on Ovid...
Ovid's Fasti must be understood as participating in both the Callimachean tradition of learned poetr...
Anti-Augustan readings dominate the scholarship on Fasti 3.697–710. This thesis challenges these ant...
Stephen Hinds has demonstrated, through analysis of the deeply intertextual relationship between Ovi...
This dissertation studies Ovid’s Fasti and contemporary Augustan Rome. In this poem, Ovid provides e...
Previous scholarship has laid out some important groundwork on Ovid\u27s use of Callimachus\u27 Aeti...
The traditionally harmonious Muses disagree on the etymology of the month May at the beginning of Ov...
In Ovid’s Fasti, the rape narratives of Callisto, Lara, Flora, and Carna contain the common themes o...
Until the late Twentieth Century Fasti was arguably Ovid’s least favoured extant work. Fasti was ext...
In the opening of Fasti 6, Ovid proposes different explanations for the origin of the month name Jun...
During the crisis of the Republic, the founder of Rome became the symbol of a cold-blooded and unscr...
Long-term neglect combined with intermittent crude misinterpretation distorted the reputation of Ovi...
Ovid’s Fasti can be seen as the pivotal work of his career. It was composed alongside the Metamorph...
2018-08-07This dissertation offers a literary, historical, and cultural analysis of Ovid’s “Epistula...
The paper studies the possible relationship between Ovid's difficult political situation and the com...
Despite the prevailing interest in authority in Ovidian studies, studies have often focussed on Ovid...
Ovid's Fasti must be understood as participating in both the Callimachean tradition of learned poetr...
Anti-Augustan readings dominate the scholarship on Fasti 3.697–710. This thesis challenges these ant...
Stephen Hinds has demonstrated, through analysis of the deeply intertextual relationship between Ovi...