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In this volume, Francesca Martelli outlines some of the main contours of recent, current and future research on Ovid. Her study looks back to the rehabilitation of Ovid's oeuvre in the 1980s, and considers the post-modern aesthetic prerogatives and post-structuralist theoretical concerns that drove the critical recuperation of his poetry throughout that decade and in the decades that followed. But it also looks forward, by considering how the themes of this poet's oeuvre answer to a variety of new materialist concerns that are now gaining currency in the humanities and social sciences. It highlights the ecopoetic sensibility of the Metamorphoses, for example, and unpacks the environmental narratives that this poem yields when read in dialogue with the discourses of critical posthumanism. And it closes by considering the hauntological aesthetics of Ovid's exile poetry as a comment on the effects of the principate on time, space, media, and art.
Francesca Martelli, DPhil (2007), Oxon, is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of California, Los Angeles. She has broad interests in Latin literature and critical theory, and is the author of Ovid's Revisions (CUP, 2013).
ContentsOvidFrancesca K.A. Martelli Abstract 1Keywords1 Introduction: Ovid, a Poet between Paradigms2 Gender, Sexuality, and Desire in the Amores, Ars Amatoria, and Heroides3 Metamorphoses (i): Between Nature and Culture4 Metamorphoses (ii): Naturecultures5 Ovid’s Fasti and the Ideological Bind6 Hauntologies of Exile: Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto7 ConclusionBibliography