Search results for "Ovidius"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Omnia mutantur, nihil interit. Un epos pseudo-didascalico sul mondo in trasformazione

Settore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura LatinaOvidio Metamorfosi Epica didascalica Lucrezio Filosofia Cosmogonia Ovid Metamorphoses Ovidius
researchProduct

Noterelle al «Filostrato» e al «Ninfale fiesolano» di Giovanni Boccaccio

2022

Abstract: This paper presents three brief reading notes on as many passages of the Filostrato (IV 51:1-8; IV 56, 4-8) and the Ninfale fiesolano (229, 1-5) by Giovanni Boccaccio, in the search for probable classical and medieval latin sources and models that have so far escaped the attention of scholars.

Settore L-FIL-LET/08 - Letteratura Latina Medievale E UmanisticaDanteFrancesco PetrarcaSettore L-FIL-LET/14 - Critica Letteraria E Letterature ComparateOvidioMassimianoGiovanni Boccaccio «Filostrato» «Ninfale fiesolano» tradizione classica poesia mediolatina Ovidio Massimiano «Pamphilus» Andrea Cappellano Dante PetrarcaAndrea CappellanoGiovanni Boccaccio «Filostrato» «Ninfale fiesolano» Classical Tradition Medieval Latin Poetry Ovidius Maximianus «Pamphilus» Andreas Capellanus Dante PetrarcaSettore L-FIL-LET/13 - Filologia Della Letteratura ItalianaFilostratoSettore L-FIL-LET/10 - Letteratura ItalianaNinfale fiesolanoClassical Traditiontradizione classicaCarte Romanze. Rivista di Filologia e Linguistica Romanze dalle Origini al Rinascimento
researchProduct

Bons et mauvais élèves du professeur d’amour dans le livre XIV des Métamorphoses d’Ovide 

2011

The story of Circe, Scylla and Glaucus is presented as an elegiac episode of Metamorphoses. However, the characters, who are, themselves, ignorant of the elegiac code, behave in accordance with that of the epic poem, and accordingly commit a series of erotic blunders, which they pay for dearly. Beside J. Fabre-Serris’ political analysis, a literary reading of the story is also possible. In fact, the clumsy trio contrasts with the couple Vertumnus and Pomona, also portrayed in book XIV, in which the lover is a perfect elegiac hero who succeeds brilliantly. By implicitly contrasting the two modes of conduct and by portraying a triumphant elegiac hero, Ovid casts judgement on the relative wort…

[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureOvideScyllaCircéMetamorphosesélégie[ SHS.LITT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureOvidiusMétamorphoses XIV[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature[ SHS.CLASS ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Classical studieselegyPharmacology (medical)[SHS.CLASS] Humanities and Social Sciences/Classical studiesGlaucus[SHS.CLASS]Humanities and Social Sciences/Classical studies
researchProduct