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Transformations of Ovid in Late Antiquity

Editorial CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Transformations of Ovid in Late Antiquity
-5% dto.    98,50€
93,57€
Ahorra 4,92€
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Ovid could be considered the original poet of late antiquity. In his exile poetry, he depicts a world in which Rome has become a distant memory, a community accessible only through his imagination. This, Ovid claimed, was a transformation as remar...

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Transformations of Ovid in Late Antiquity

Editorial CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Ovid could be considered the original poet of late antiquity. In his exile poetry, he depicts a world in which Rome has become a distant memory, a community accessible only through his imagination. This, Ovid claimed, was a transformation as remar...

-5% dto.    98,50€
93,57€
Ahorra 4,92€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

Ovid could be considered the original poet of late antiquity. In his exile poetry, he depicts a world in which Rome has become a distant memory, a community accessible only through his imagination. This, Ovid claimed, was a transformation as remarkable as any he had recounted in his Metamorphoses. Ian Fielding's book shows how late antique Latin poets referred to Ovid's experiences of isolation and estrangement as they reflected on the profound social and cultural transformations taking place in the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries AD. There are detailed new readings of texts by major figures such as Ausonius, Paulinus of Nola, Boethius and Venantius Fortunatus. For these authors, Fielding emphasizes, Ovid was not simply a stylistic model, but an important intellectual presence. Ovid's fortunes in late antiquity reveal that poetry, far from declining into irrelevance, remained a powerful mode of expression in this fascinating period.

Although Ovid is perhaps the most influential Latin poet, the vast bibliography on his reception has so far focused almost entirely on the second millennium AD. This book explores his importance for late antique authors in Italy, Gaul, Spain and Africa, and will interest Latinists and scholars of late antiquity.