Introduction

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 0 CLASSICS CLASSICAL WORLD Pub Date : 2021-11-24 DOI:10.1353/clw.2021.0027
Eleonora Tola
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Abstract

This special issue is concerned with a multifaceted Ovidian topic: “The Dominant Female in Ovid’s Metamorphoses: Gendered Allusions, and Gendered Receptions.” The idea arose in a conversation that I had with Alden Smith at the Université Clermont Auvergne of Clermont-Ferrand in November 2017. Its first step took form in an International Conference organized by Prof. Smith in Texas at Baylor University in February 2019. That conference explored different aspects of rhetoric and freedom of speech in the Late Augustan Age, particularly in Ovid’s works. In the sympotic dialogues that occur naturally enough at such a conference, we spoke also about women’s freedoms in the late Augustan milieu, mostly as represented in Ovid’s literary production. Out of those rich discussions resulted a plan for further work on the topic, which now focused on the panel we had proposed for the FIEC conference, held in London in July 2019. Timing is everything: it is undeniable that 2017 and 2018 were two years in which a paradigm shift occurred vis-à-vis gender dynamics not just in the USA but in many parts of the world. Of course, in classical literature these issues are not new, since they gained strength in the field from the interesting approaches developed in feminist film studies in the 1970s.1 We thought, however, that (re)approaching the topic at this social and somewhat “global” juncture could be of interest; and it was in this particular conference, and now in this volume, we believe, that it is. Smith’s work on allusion and my own stylistic and poetic work on Latin literature allowed us to enlarge such a topic to a more comprehensive examination of one of the most innovative and still challenging aspects of Ovidian writing: that of female characters gaining physical, and psychological mastery over their male objects of desire, within a clear reversal of Roman accepted gendered patterns. From a perspective
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介绍
本期特刊关注的是奥维德的一个多面主题:“奥维德《变形记》中的主导女性:性别暗示和性别接受。”2017年11月,我在克莱蒙费朗的克莱蒙奥弗涅大学(universit Clermont Auvergne)与奥尔登史密斯(Alden Smith)的一次谈话中产生了这个想法。2019年2月,史密斯教授在德克萨斯州贝勒大学组织的一次国际会议上,迈出了第一步。那次会议探讨了奥古斯都晚期修辞和言论自由的不同方面,尤其是奥维德的作品。在这样一个会议上自然出现的象征性对话中,我们也谈到了奥古斯都晚期环境中的妇女自由,主要体现在奥维德的文学作品中。在这些丰富的讨论中,我们制定了关于这一主题的进一步工作计划,现在的重点是我们为2019年7月在伦敦举行的FIEC会议提议的小组。时间决定一切:不可否认的是,2017年和2018年是在-à-vis性别动态方面发生范式转变的两年,不仅在美国,而且在世界许多地方。当然,在古典文学中,这些问题并不新鲜,因为它们从20世纪70年代女权主义电影研究中发展出来的有趣方法中获得了力量然而,我们认为,在这个社会和某种程度上的“全球”节点上讨论这个话题可能会引起人们的兴趣;在这次特别的会议上,现在在这本书中,我们相信,它是。史密斯对典故的研究,以及我自己对拉丁文学的文体和诗学研究,使我们能够将这一主题扩大到更全面地考察奥维德写作中最具创新性和挑战性的方面之一:女性角色在身体和心理上对男性欲望对象的控制,与罗马人接受的性别模式明显相反。从一个角度来看
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来源期刊
CLASSICAL WORLD
CLASSICAL WORLD CLASSICS-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Classical World (ISSN 0009-8418) is the quarterly journal of The Classical Association of the Atlantic States, published on a seasonal schedule with Fall (September-November), Winter (December-February), Spring (March-May), and Summer (June-August) issues. Begun in 1907 as The Classical Weekly, this peer-reviewed journal publishes contributions on all aspects of Greek and Roman literature, history, and society.
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