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Aesacus: The Rhetoric of Remorse (Metamorphoses 11.749–12.7)
Abstract:The myth of Aesacus represents a sustained, dialogical engagement with Virgil’s poetry, in particular the Georgics, and with Ovid’s own poetry. Aesacus is represented as partly a surrogate for Virgil’s Aristaeus, for both characters pursue a young woman who dies from snakebite while in flight. Allusion in the myth of Aesacus serves as a tool for critical, authorial inscription and intervention into the Virgilian tradition. It also offers an important interrogation of Ovid’s poetics of sexual violence; Aesacus provides the single human voice in the Metamorphoses to express remorse for a young woman’s ruin, an oddity that has political implications.
期刊介绍:
Arethusa is known for publishing original literary and cultural studies of the ancient world and of the field of classics that combine contemporary theoretical perspectives with more traditional approaches to literary and material evidence. Interdisciplinary in nature, this distinguished journal often features special thematic issues.