Browsing by Subject "Ovid"
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- PublicationOpen AccessAusencia de Ovidio en el Liber monstrorum(2019-04-12) Ibáñez Chacón, ÁlvaroGran parte de los capitula del Liber monstrorumson de tema mitológico; sin embargo, su fuente principal no es Ovidio, sino otra fuente, gramatical o poética (especialmente Virgilio y sus comentaristas). Ovidio no es fuente del Liber monstrorum porque no era conocido en los centros monásticos insulares donde fue compuesto el bestiario.
- PublicationOpen AccessDaedalus' myth and its occurrences in Ovid: A three-term comparison and some considerations on Ars 2, 21-98(2017-03-09) Martorana, SimonaOne of the main features of Ovid's poetry is certainly the ability of the poet to modify the multiple versions of myths provided by the classical tradition, according to his own taste, to the literary genre in which a specific myth falls, to his needs and his aims. Sometimes this operation remains only a literary pattern, some others it reveals itself to be crucial for inquiring about the modus scribendi of the author and for literally entering his workshop. It is the case of the myth of Daedalus, which is told by Ovid both in Ars amatoria and in Metamorphoses, and is mentioned rapidly in two passages of Tristia as well. In the essay, it is run a comparative analysis of the two very similar passages of Ars amatoria and Metamorphoses, and their main differences are stressed. After that, these differences are put in comparison with the two passages of Tristia. Through this process, it will be possible to demonstrate that the passage of Ars 2 reporting Daedalus' myth may have undergone a later reworking, i.e. was modified or changed somehow by the poet himself after he was banished from Rome.
- PublicationOpen AccessDeflexus solito cursu: Phaethon between Ovid and Manilius(2019-04-12) Kyriakidis, StratisIn a dialogue with the poets and philosophers of the past, Manilius in his first Book of his Astronomica uses the myth of Phaethon as one of the aetia for the creation of the Milky Way: Phaethon, the son of Sol, took his father’s chariot and, in a frenzied course, caused the conflagration of the universe; hence the creation of the Milky Way. Among the prior versions of the myth, Manilius sets his own story in direct dialogue with the Ovidian Phaethon in the Metamorphoses tracing an intentional convergence between the poet and his mythic character. With selected words and phrases, Manilius conveys his own poetic and philosophical views on the attainment of knowledge vis-à-vis passive ignorance (which may bring admiration and fear) and the conflict between the novumand the solitum, the tradition. The DRN of the Epicurean Lucretius is the text on which the Stoic Manilius relies in order to develop his own thoughts on the need to respect tradition as well as on the importance of the renewal of poetic discourse. The novum was a major pursuit in the poetry of all the great poets of the Augustan Age, but all depends on how this pursuit of the new ‘blends’ with the solitum coming from the past.
- PublicationOpen AccessLa elegía Amores III 5: posible indicio del perfeccionismo de Ovidio(Murcia: Centro de Estudios del Próximo Oriente y la Antigüedad Tardía – CEPOAT, 2012) Martín Puente, CristinaDesde hace mucho tiempo hay autores que discuten si la elegía Amores 3,5 fue compuesta por Ovidio o no, pero continúa editándose como si fue ra auténtica. En cambio, otros textos con una problemática parecida se han eliminado por que los editores los consideran espurios y no hay un protocolo establecido seguido por todos lo s fi lólogos. En este trabajo se analizan las circunstancias que rodean a la obra de Ovidio y a esta elegía y se constata que de momento es difícil llegar a una conclusión defi nitiva sobre su autoría, pero podría ser un indicio del perfeccionismo del poeta
- PublicationOpen AccessEl encomium a Augusto del Ibis ovidiano en la versión al castellano de Diego Mexía de Fernangil(2019-04-12) Baeza Angulo, EulogioEl presente trabajo ofrece un estudio, desde un enfoque retórico, sobre el encomio ovidiano a Augusto, In Ibin23-28, con un cotejo de la traducción castellana de Diego Mexía de Fernangil, publicada en la Primera parte del Parnaso Antártico de obras amatorias(f. 243v).
- PublicationOpen AccessHipólito y Esculapio en Virgilio y Ovidio.(Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones, 2020) Estefanía, DulceEn este artículo se muestra cómo Ovidio actúa, en relación con los episodios virgilianos de Hipólito y Esculapio, como un exégeta complementario del poeta de Mantua. Contribuye, tanto en Fastos como en Metamorfosis, a la identificación del dios de Epidauro y completa y explica todo lo que en el Hipólito de Virgilio está incompleto y oscuro.
- PublicationOpen AccessLecturas de la metamorfosis de Dafne en la poesía española contemporánea(2019-04-12) Castro Jiménez, Mª DoloresNos centraremos en la presencia y la reescritura del mito ovidiano de Dafne (Met. I 452-567) en la poesía española contemporánea. Se estudiarán concretamentepoemas de Federico García Lorca, Jorge Guillén, Pedro Salinas, Elena Martín Vivaldi, Francisco Brines, Carlos Clementson, Victor Botas,Juana Castro, Ana Rossetti, Abelardo Linares, Carmelo Guillén, Vicente Cristóbal, Ramón Bascuñana y Noelia Illán Conesa.