The subject of my dissertation is Ovid's intertextual engagement with the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women (aka the Ehoiai). I examine the Hesiodic character of Ovid’s work, focusing mainly on the Metamorphoses and Heroides 16-17. The Metamorphoses begins with Chaos and moves on to the loves of the gods, reiterating the transition from the Theogony to the Catalogue. Divine passions for beautiful maidens constitute a recurring motif in the Metamorphoses, establishing the importance of the erotic element in Ovid’s hexameter poem and referring to the main topic of the Ehoiai (fr. 1.1-5 M-W). The first five books of Ovid’s epic follow the descendants of the river-god Inachus, beginning with Jupiter’s rape of Io and reaching forward to Perseus, and the...
Ovid’s interest in women and their lives is apparent throughout his texts, but is especially so in t...
In this thesis, I explore the construction of female erotic desire in Ovid’s work as it is represent...
In my thesis, I explore the generic allusion of two ekphrases in the textile competition between Min...
The many short studies about catalogues in Homer and Hesiod consider three issues: identifying the c...
In my thesis, I explore the generic allusion of two ekphrases in the textile competition between Min...
Ovid's Heroides in the form they have come down to us are a diverse group comprising fourteen verse ...
This dissertation analyzes Ovid’s Metamorphoses through the lens of praise and blame poetry and focu...
This article discusses the Hesiodic character of the Metamorphoses vis-à-vis the Homeric character o...
The subject of this dissertation is the reception of Euripidean tragedy in Ovid’s Metamorphoses. In ...
This book examines the extant fragments of the Archaic Greek poem known in antiquity as Hesiod\u27s ...
Acknowledgements -- Texts, translations and abbreviations -- Chapter 1: Approaching Hesiod -- The ar...
This dissertation explores how the mythological heroines from Ovid‘s Heroides and Metamorphoses were...
In this thesis, I explore the construction of female erotic desire in Ovid’s work as it is represent...
Abstract: Ovid’s Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love) consists of three books. The first teaches the young...
Ovid’s interest in women and their lives is apparent throughout his texts, but is especially so in t...
Ovid’s interest in women and their lives is apparent throughout his texts, but is especially so in t...
In this thesis, I explore the construction of female erotic desire in Ovid’s work as it is represent...
In my thesis, I explore the generic allusion of two ekphrases in the textile competition between Min...
The many short studies about catalogues in Homer and Hesiod consider three issues: identifying the c...
In my thesis, I explore the generic allusion of two ekphrases in the textile competition between Min...
Ovid's Heroides in the form they have come down to us are a diverse group comprising fourteen verse ...
This dissertation analyzes Ovid’s Metamorphoses through the lens of praise and blame poetry and focu...
This article discusses the Hesiodic character of the Metamorphoses vis-à-vis the Homeric character o...
The subject of this dissertation is the reception of Euripidean tragedy in Ovid’s Metamorphoses. In ...
This book examines the extant fragments of the Archaic Greek poem known in antiquity as Hesiod\u27s ...
Acknowledgements -- Texts, translations and abbreviations -- Chapter 1: Approaching Hesiod -- The ar...
This dissertation explores how the mythological heroines from Ovid‘s Heroides and Metamorphoses were...
In this thesis, I explore the construction of female erotic desire in Ovid’s work as it is represent...
Abstract: Ovid’s Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love) consists of three books. The first teaches the young...
Ovid’s interest in women and their lives is apparent throughout his texts, but is especially so in t...
Ovid’s interest in women and their lives is apparent throughout his texts, but is especially so in t...
In this thesis, I explore the construction of female erotic desire in Ovid’s work as it is represent...
In my thesis, I explore the generic allusion of two ekphrases in the textile competition between Min...