Test #1: Ovid Basic Culture Flashcards

0
Q

Childhood?

A
  • From a wealthy equestrian family at Sulmo
  • Sent off to Rome to study rhetoric, then Greece
  • Turned down an appointment to senatorial rank to follow his passion of poetry
  • Hung out with other poets like Horace, Propertius and Tibullus
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1
Q

Birth Name and Date?

A

Publius Ovidus Naso

March 20th, 43 B.C.

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2
Q

Exile?

A
  • Ars Amantia and Ovid’s pervasive carefree attitude about marriage most likely angered Augustus so much that he was exiled to Tomis
  • Ovid claimed it was over a “carmen and an error”
  • Exiled from 8 A.D. - 17 A.D., his death
  • Wrote Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto
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3
Q

Amores

A
  • Romantic elegies chronicling his affairs with Corinna, a spin off of characters in other Roman poets’ works like Lesiba & Catullus
  • 50 poems full of literary devices and poetic techniques
  • Plays at the boundaries and definitions of poetic genres
  • More passionate than the Metamorphoses
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4
Q

Heroides

A
  • a collection of elegiac letters from famous literary heroines or heroes’ wives to their husbands (i.e. Ariadne to Thesus)
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5
Q

Medicamina Faciel Feminae

A
  • energetic poem on cosmetics
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6
Q

Ars Amatoria

A
  • witty “manual of seduction” with two books for men, one for women
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7
Q

Remedia Amoris

A
  • a sequal/follow-up handbook to the Ars Amatoria, telling the reader to get out of love/disentangle oneself from the snares of love
  • an apologetic tone
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8
Q

Reactions to Ovid’s Work?

A
  • Ovid’s erotic poetry had received criticism and the Ars even got him exiled
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9
Q

Fatsi

A
  • a poetic calendar, of which only 6 books survive (one per month), that details the holidays and other events in the Roman calendar and life.
  • an immensely valuable source for all things Roman
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10
Q

Metamorphoses

A
  • 15 volumes/250 tales of transformation
  • the sheer size of it is the style of an epic powem, however it is an anti-epic poem (many little stories and other qualities)
  • admired for its animating, highly visual and cinematographic depictions
  • “carmen perpetuum”: an epic
  • ends with Julius Caesar’s deification
  • discusses such things as human psychology (a Hellenistic aspect of his poetry –> discussing emotions) and the idea of public vs. private
  • depicts Apollo as a fool and a joke, which causes the reader to re-evaluate their emperor Augustus, who claimed him to be his very own patron deity?
  • a GENRE BREAKER, bringing down the barriers between the world of heroes and the world of lovers
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