The purpose of the article is to examine some aspects of the rhetorical strategy employed by Ovid in the second book of the Tristia, with particular attention to the relationship between the alleged guilt of the carmen and the immorality of the mimes staged on the occasion of the Floralia. Isolated from the long literature lesson addressed to Augustus, the Aeneid is presented by Ovid as a poem in which the epic code encroaches on erotic themes.
La rilettura dell’Eneide nella lezione di letteratura al princeps: Ov. Trist. 2, 529-538
Ciccarelli Irma
2020-01-01
Abstract
The purpose of the article is to examine some aspects of the rhetorical strategy employed by Ovid in the second book of the Tristia, with particular attention to the relationship between the alleged guilt of the carmen and the immorality of the mimes staged on the occasion of the Floralia. Isolated from the long literature lesson addressed to Augustus, the Aeneid is presented by Ovid as a poem in which the epic code encroaches on erotic themes.File in questo prodotto:
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CICCARELLI da FAEM N.S. II, 1 (XXX, 49), 2020.pdf
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