Ovid: A Poet on the Margins: Classical World
Autor Laurel Fulkersonen Limba Engleză Paperback – iun 2016
Din seria Classical World
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472531346
ISBN-10: 1472531345
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 6 mm
Greutate: 0.15 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Classical World
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472531345
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 6 mm
Greutate: 0.15 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Classical World
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Includes student-friendly features: a Latin words and proper names glossary, map and a timeline
Notă biografică
Laurel Fulkerson is Associate Professor of Classics and Director of Graduate Studies at Florida State University, USA. She is currently editor of The Classical Journal and her writing includes The Ovidian Heroine as Author (2005).
Cuprins
PrefaceAcknowledgementsAbbreviations of Ovidian WorksChapter 1: Life on the margins 1.1Truth Stranger than Fiction: Poet Exiled Under Suspicious Circumstances! 1.2 Meanwhile, Back in Rome.: Ovid's Historical Context Chapter 2: Repetition compulsion and Ovidian excess 2.1 Now you see him, now you still see him: Ovidian narrative style and metre 2.2 Same Story, Different Day: Repetition and ReceptionChapter 3: Romans at Home and Abroad: Identity and the Colonial Subject 3.1 Strangers in a Strange Land: Explorers and Exiles3.2 Speaking and silence; Victims and Victimizers3.3 Empire and ColonialismFurther ReadingsGlossary of proper names and Latin termsIndex
Recenzii
Effortlessly breezing through an astonishing number of themes, Fulkerson creates an exciting and well-rounded introduction to Ovid, his work and his world ... Not just for students, though, this book is a worthy read for anyone approaching the poet for the first time ... With a heady blend of history, politics, personality, poetry and biography, this concise book will encourage readers to dip into Ovid's work.
[An] insightful and lively book ... [It] is delightfully illustrated with Ovid-inspired artworks; it lists good material for further reading and has a helpful glossary of proper names and Latin terms ... [A] splendid introduction to one of the world's great poets.
Fulkerson's study constitutes an ideal addition to the [Classical World] series, offering a brief and brilliant introduction to Ovid written in clear language and demanding no prior knowledge on the topic ... This book is a perfect introduction for Ovidian beginners but will also benefit and appeal to readers more familiar with Ovid thanks particularly to its fresh focus on Ovidian marginality.
The work of Ovid, a major poet of early imperial Rome, is often read (be it in Latin or in translation) in undergraduate courses, and it has recently become a flashpoint for discussions of trigger warnings because of the incidence of rape and objectification of women in the narratives. Released in the "Classical World Series," which offers brief introductions to ancient topics, Fulkerson's book occasionally addresses those issues within a broader focus on Ovid's themes of displacement, marginality, and the poet's own exile. Tracing topics that crisscross Ovid's works (rather than proceeding poem by poem), Fulkerson (Florida State Univ.) is especially alert to the polycentrism of Ovid's poetry and the slipperiness of his stance as authority, both focal points of recent criticism. Perhaps more could have been conceded to the concerns of nonspecialist readers; more numerous quotations and sustained discussion of particular texts might have provided hooks for a clearer understanding of what is at stake in engaging with this poet, even at the cost of less general discussion in this necessarily concise format. Fulkerson's enthusiasm and knowledge, however, make for a lively and accessible introduction to the poetry and the scholarship. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.
Fulkerson. encourages the reader to find in Ovid's corpus not only polished play with a variety of literary and generic traditions but also the presence of an ongoing debate about key existential conflicts within the individual.
This is an admirable first guide to Ovid that also rewards reading by more advanced Ovidian scholars for the breadth of topics Fulkerson covers.
In order to frame the themes, artistry and spirit of Ovid's writings, Fulkerson notes that 'the lenses of exile and otherness, on the one hand, and of revision and repetition on the other, serve us throughout his work as structural metaphors' (p. 3). She applies these lenses with great expertise, reflecting magisterially the vast bibliography of recent decades, and yet manages to impose ideas of her own upon the subject that will delight both the casual and the professional reader of Ovid's works ... A very useful manual on Ovid's poems that combines old and new ideas about his works in a manner that is informative, eloquent and intriguing.
I jumped at the chance to review Fulkerson's new study of Ovid ...The book prompts insightful thought.
This lively, elegant book is both suggestive and comprehensive, covering all of Ovid's poetry and placing it in contexts historical, political, and literary. Fulkerson's clearly written, witty volume provides a superb review, from Ovid's high-spirited youth to his distressed old age, from his often-maddening love poetry to his often-mystifying exilic works, with impressive attention to his Metamorphoses. It will make an ideal introduction to this complex, challenging, even infuriating, but critically important poet. Highly recommended.
[An] insightful and lively book ... [It] is delightfully illustrated with Ovid-inspired artworks; it lists good material for further reading and has a helpful glossary of proper names and Latin terms ... [A] splendid introduction to one of the world's great poets.
Fulkerson's study constitutes an ideal addition to the [Classical World] series, offering a brief and brilliant introduction to Ovid written in clear language and demanding no prior knowledge on the topic ... This book is a perfect introduction for Ovidian beginners but will also benefit and appeal to readers more familiar with Ovid thanks particularly to its fresh focus on Ovidian marginality.
The work of Ovid, a major poet of early imperial Rome, is often read (be it in Latin or in translation) in undergraduate courses, and it has recently become a flashpoint for discussions of trigger warnings because of the incidence of rape and objectification of women in the narratives. Released in the "Classical World Series," which offers brief introductions to ancient topics, Fulkerson's book occasionally addresses those issues within a broader focus on Ovid's themes of displacement, marginality, and the poet's own exile. Tracing topics that crisscross Ovid's works (rather than proceeding poem by poem), Fulkerson (Florida State Univ.) is especially alert to the polycentrism of Ovid's poetry and the slipperiness of his stance as authority, both focal points of recent criticism. Perhaps more could have been conceded to the concerns of nonspecialist readers; more numerous quotations and sustained discussion of particular texts might have provided hooks for a clearer understanding of what is at stake in engaging with this poet, even at the cost of less general discussion in this necessarily concise format. Fulkerson's enthusiasm and knowledge, however, make for a lively and accessible introduction to the poetry and the scholarship. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.
Fulkerson. encourages the reader to find in Ovid's corpus not only polished play with a variety of literary and generic traditions but also the presence of an ongoing debate about key existential conflicts within the individual.
This is an admirable first guide to Ovid that also rewards reading by more advanced Ovidian scholars for the breadth of topics Fulkerson covers.
In order to frame the themes, artistry and spirit of Ovid's writings, Fulkerson notes that 'the lenses of exile and otherness, on the one hand, and of revision and repetition on the other, serve us throughout his work as structural metaphors' (p. 3). She applies these lenses with great expertise, reflecting magisterially the vast bibliography of recent decades, and yet manages to impose ideas of her own upon the subject that will delight both the casual and the professional reader of Ovid's works ... A very useful manual on Ovid's poems that combines old and new ideas about his works in a manner that is informative, eloquent and intriguing.
I jumped at the chance to review Fulkerson's new study of Ovid ...The book prompts insightful thought.
This lively, elegant book is both suggestive and comprehensive, covering all of Ovid's poetry and placing it in contexts historical, political, and literary. Fulkerson's clearly written, witty volume provides a superb review, from Ovid's high-spirited youth to his distressed old age, from his often-maddening love poetry to his often-mystifying exilic works, with impressive attention to his Metamorphoses. It will make an ideal introduction to this complex, challenging, even infuriating, but critically important poet. Highly recommended.