Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Ovid, a poet unashamedly in love in poetry, including his own, has enjoyed a recent renaissance in popularity. Yet there is still a certain tendency amongst critics to withhold from his writing the close, word-by-word, engagement which is its due. The primary aim of The Metamorphosis of Persephone is to celebrate this poetâs detailed verbal art.
Table of Contents
'Acknowledgements; Preface; Part I. Two Settings for a Rape: 1. Metamorphoses 5.256 64: the Heliconian fount; 2. Metamorphoses 5.385 91: the landscape of Enna; Part II. Ovidâs Two Persephones: 3. The Homeric Hymn to Demeter: Fasti 4; 4. The Homeric Hymn to Demeter: Metamorphoses 5; 5. Elegy and epic: a traditional approach; 6. Elegy and epic: a new approach; Epilogue; Notes; Works cited; Index of passages discussed; Index of subjects.\n
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