Format:
Online-Ressource (274 p)
Edition:
Online-Ausg.
ISBN:
9781107037717
Content:
Scrutinizes Ovid's tendency to edit his major works and advertise their revised status, a distinctive feature of his literary career
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
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Cover; Half title; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgements; Note on the texts; Abbreviations; 1 Introduction: Ovid and authorial revision; Revision and textual authority; Revision and the preface; Revision and the author; 2 Gemini amores: approaching the two editions; Amores 1.1-1.6: the opening sequence; The first book division: Amores 1.14, 1.15and 2.1; The second book division: Amores 2.18, 2.19and 3.1; Middles: Amores 2.9a and b, and 2.10; Closing the 'second edition': Amores 3.12, 3.14and 3.15; 3 The ends of the affair: desire and deferral in the Ars Amatoria
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Repetition, metonymy, working through: Freud and the art of narrativeMobile endings, mobile middles; Exposure, castration and the body in the middle; Repetition: overlapping (and lapping over) at Ars 2.112-42; 4 Reformatting Time (revising the Fasti); Incompletion and revision; Whose calendar?; Which calendar?; Opening the year; Closing the year; Closing the year (again); 5 Tristia: revision and the authorial name; Book-roll/monument: Tr. 1.1/Tr. 5.14 (and Hor. Epist. 1.20/Odes 3.30); Monument/book-roll: Met. 15.871-9/Tr. 1.1; Monumental names: Met. 15.807-879; Bookends: Tr. 3.14and Tr. 4.10
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Inscribing names: Tr. 3.3Revising the monument: Tristia 5; 6 Books of letters: revision and the letter collection in the Epistulae ex Ponto; Author/reader: Ex P. 1.1; Public/private: the Ex Ponto and the Domus Augusta; Publica monumenta: writing the exemplum; Authorship: sublimation/distribution; Epilogue; Bibliography; General index; Index locorum
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781107598386
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781107037717
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Ovid's Revisions : The Editor as Author
Language:
English
Keywords:
Electronic books