Two Thousand Years of Solitude: Exile After Ovid
Two Thousand Years of Solitude: Exile After Ovid
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Abstract
The poet Ovid stands at the head of the Western tradition of exiled authors; banished by the emperor Augustus in AD 8 from Rome to the far-off shores of Romania, in his Tristia (‘Sad Things’) and Epistulae ex Ponto (‘Letters from the Black Sea’), Ovid records his unhappy experience of political, cultural, and linguistic displacement from his homeland. For a huge variety of writers throughout the world in the two millennia after his exile, Ovid has performed the role of archetypal exile, allowing them to articulate a range of experiences of disgrace, dislocation, and alienation, and to explore exile from a number of perspectives, including both the personal and the fictional. The broad cultural impact of Ovid’s exile in Western literature is assessed in the present interdisciplinary volume by bringing together the fruit of the investigations of scholars working across a range of disciplines, including Classics, Modern Languages, Comparative Literature, and Translation Studies; the volume should appeal to those working in all of these areas as well as those with a broader interest in exile as a literary and historical phenomenon. The volume’s exploration of the manifold repercussions of Ovidian exile illuminates Ovid’s cross-cultural influence (as contributors explore responses from the ancient world, through the Renaissance, to the modern era), Ovidian authorship (as it analyses how the theme of exile is powerfully interwoven into numerous works by Ovid), and of ‘exilic’ works of art.
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Front Matter
- Introduction: Two Thousand Years of Responses to Ovid’s Exile
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Part I
Ovidian Exile and The Poets-
1
Life and Poetry: Differences and Resemblances between Ovid and Dante
Efrem Zambon
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2
Exiled Rome and August Pope: Petrarch’s Letters to Benedict XII
L. B. T. Houghton
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3
Black-Sea Latin, Du Bellay, and the Barbarian Turn: Tristia, Regrets, Translations
Stephen Hinds
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4
Lætus & exilii conditione fruor: Milton’s Ovidian ‘Exile’
Mandy Green
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5
Elizabethan Exile after Ovid: Thomas Churchyard’s Tristia (1572)
Liz Oakley-Brown
- 6 ‘I shall be thy devoted foe’: The Exile of the Ovid of the Ibis in English reception
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7
Ovid and Virgil at the North Pole: Marvell’s ‘A Letter to Dr Ingelo’
Philip Hardie
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8
The Chevalier de Boufflers in Senegal: An Eighteenth‐Century Ovid?
Barbara Witucki
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9
Ovid on the Channel Islands: The Exile of Victor Hugo
Fiona Cox
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10
In the Step(pe)s of Genius: Pushkin’s Ovidian Exile
Duncan F. Kennedy
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11
Ovid and the Modern Poetics of Exile
Stephen Harrison
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12
Children of the Island: Ovid, Poesis, and Loss in the Poetry of Eavan Boland and Derek Mahon
Jennifer J. Dellner
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1
Life and Poetry: Differences and Resemblances between Ovid and Dante
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Part II
Ovidian Exile In Modern Prose-
13
The Mystery of Ovid’s Exile: Ovid and the Roman Detectives
Helen Lovatt
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14
Jane Alison, The Love-Artist: Love in Exile or Exile in Love?
Charilaos N. Michalopoulos
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15
Ovid’s Last Wor(l)d
Andreas N. Michalopoulos
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16
The Myth is Out There: Reality and Fiction at Tomis (David Malouf’s An Imaginary Life)
Ioannis Ziogas
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17
Tomis Writes Back: Politics of Peripheral Identity in David Malouf’s and Vintila Horia’s Re-narrations of Ovidian Exile
Sebastian Matzner
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13
The Mystery of Ovid’s Exile: Ovid and the Roman Detectives
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End Matter
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