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Beschreibung
Ovid's Metamorphoses is a vast mythological epic in fifteen books, tracing the world from creation to the deification of Julius Caesar through stories of transformation: gods become animals, mortals become trees, stones, stars, and voices. Written in dactylic hexameter yet animated by wit, irony, and narrative fluidity, it reworks Greek and Roman myth into a continuous poetic tapestry. Its style is elegant, sensuous, and psychologically acute, standing at once within the epic tradition of Homer and Virgil and against it, privileging change, desire, artifice, and instability over martial grandeur. Publius Ovidius Naso, born in 43 BCE, belonged to the sophisticated literary culture of Augustan Rome. Trained in rhetoric and famed for erotic and didactic poetry, he brought to myth a lawyer's precision, a court poet's polish, and a skeptical observer's eye for power. Composed near the end of his Roman career, before or around his exile to Tomis, the poem reflects both imperial ideology and subtle tensions with authority. This book is essential for readers of classical literature, mythology, and the Western imagination. It offers not merely a compendium of myths, but a profound meditation on identity, violence, beauty, memory, and the transforming power of art.
Ovid's Metamorphoses is a vast mythological epic in fifteen books, tracing the world from creation to the deification of Julius Caesar through stories of transformation: gods become animals, mortals become trees, stones, stars, and voices. Written in dactylic hexameter yet animated by wit, irony, and narrative fluidity, it reworks Greek and Roman myth into a continuous poetic tapestry. Its style is elegant, sensuous, and psychologically acute, standing at once within the epic tradition of Homer and Virgil and against it, privileging change, desire, artifice, and instability over martial grandeur. Publius Ovidius Naso, born in 43 BCE, belonged to the sophisticated literary culture of Augustan Rome. Trained in rhetoric and famed for erotic and didactic poetry, he brought to myth a lawyer's precision, a court poet's polish, and a skeptical observer's eye for power. Composed near the end of his Roman career, before or around his exile to Tomis, the poem reflects both imperial ideology and subtle tensions with authority. This book is essential for readers of classical literature, mythology, and the Western imagination. It offers not merely a compendium of myths, but a profound meditation on identity, violence, beauty, memory, and the transforming power of art.
Über den Autor
Pblius Ovidius Ns (43 BC - 17/18 AD) was a Roman poet who lived during the reign of [...] is today best known for the Metamorphoses, a 15-book continuous mythological narrative written in the meter of epic, and for works in elegiac couplets such as Ars Amatoria ("The Art of Love") and Fasti.

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