دانلود کتاب Gender and Genre in Ovid’s Remedia amoris [thesis]
by Christopher Michael Brunelle
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عنوان فارسی: جنس و نوع در Ovid را Remedia amoris [پایان نامه] |
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جزییات کتاب
The Remedia overthrows the amatory rules of the Ars amatoria by upsetting didactic decorum. The male bias of decorum as defined in the Ars prevents the most basic tactics of the Remedia from being applied by women. Despite her talents, Circe is strangely incapable of contravening decorum in order to fall out of love. Her failure is a warning to all the Remedia's female students, just as Ulysses stands as the paradigm of correct male behavior.
Ovid uses poetic decorum to challenge the reader. The seriocomic defense of his Musa proterva prepares us to be offended by the indecorous sex described thereafter. But the widely acclaimed poetic beauty that Ovid uses to describe the death of Phyllis is in fact detrimental to the female students to whom the passage is addressed.
Poetic decorum is the Remedia's paradox. Ovid’s emphasis on the relation of elegiac meter to erotic content and his warning of the dangers of love poetry hint that the Remedia is a poem that its own students should not read. In this opposition of poetic form and didactic goal, Ovid is the opposite of Lucretius, whose Epicurean program is benefited by versification. Yet the basic content of the Remedia can be taken seriously, at least by men: the mythical examples show that the female student is in greater danger than the male, but the historical reception of the poem offers a key to its essential practicality.