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Metamorphoses (Norton Critical Editions)
Metamorphoses (Norton Critical Editions) | Ovid
3 posts | 6 read
In his award-winning translation, Charles Martin combines fidelity to Ovid’s text with verse that catches the speed and liveliness of the original. Ovid’s epic poem—whose theme of change has resonated throughout the ages—is one of the most important texts of Western imagination, an inspiration from Dante’s time to the present, when writers such as Salman Rushdie and Italo Calvino have found a living source in Ovid’s work. The text is accompanied by a preface, A Note on the Translation, and detailed explanatory annotations. “Sources and Backgrounds” includes Seneca’s inspired commentary on Ovid, Charles Martin’s essay on the ways in which pantomimic dancing—an art form popular in Ovid’s time—may have been the model for Metamorphoses, as well as related works by Virgil, Callimachus, Hesiod, and Lucretius, among others. From the enormous body of scholarly writing on Metamorphoses, Charles Martin has chosen six major interpretations by Bernard Knox, J. R. R. Mackail, Norman O. Brown, Italo Calvino, Frederick Ahl, and Diane Middlebrook. A Glossary of Persons, Places, and Personifications in the Metamorphoses and a Chronology and Selected Bibliography are also included.
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Tamra
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To the modern reader, some seriously bizarre and cringeworthy stuff happening here. If this and Ovid‘s other poetry were published today, there would be an uproar. I read in one of his other collections about how the man overcame the woman‘s resistance (sexually) and she enjoyed it. What is the name or phrase used for that fantasy trope? Anyway some really awful crap depicted, even if it‘s intended as veiled criticism of Rome & Augustus.

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QuoteQueen
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GoneFishing

No species remains constant: that great renovator of matter
Nature, endlessly fashions new forms from old: there‘s nothing
in the whole universe that perishes, believe me; rather
it renews and varies its substance. What we describe as birth
is no more than incipient change from a prior state, while dying
is merely to quit it. Though the parts may be transported
hither and thither, the sum of all matter is constant.

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