ABSTRACT

This indispensable volume provides a complete course on Latin erotic elegy, allowing students to trace a coherent narrative of the genre's rise and fall, and to understand its relationship to the changes that marked the collapse of the Roman republic, and the founding of the empire.
The book begins with a detailed and wide-ranging introduction, looking at major figures, the evolution of the form, and the Roman context, with particular focus on the changing relations between the sexes. The texts that follow range from the earliest manifestations of erotic elegy, in Catullus, through Tibullus, Sulpicia (Rome's only female elegist), Propertius and Ovid.
An accessible commentary explores the historical background, issues of language and style, and the relation of each piece to its author's larger body of work. The volume closes with an anthology of critical essays representative of the main trends in scholarship; these both illuminate the genre's most salient features and help the student understand its modern reception.

chapter |36 pages

Introduction

part |69 pages

Texts

chapter |5 pages

Catullus

chapter |11 pages

Tibullus

chapter |2 pages

Sulpicia

chapter |23 pages

Propertius

chapter |27 pages

Ovid

part |197 pages

Commentary

chapter |12 pages

Catullus

chapter |38 pages

Tibullus

chapter |7 pages

Sulpicia

chapter |75 pages

Propertius

chapter |64 pages

Ovid

part |175 pages

Critical Anthology

chapter |17 pages

The Politics of Elegy

chapter |19 pages

The Role of Women in Roman Elegy

Counter-cultural feminism

chapter |18 pages

The Life of Love

chapter |20 pages

The Pastoral in City Clothes

chapter |27 pages

“But Ariadne was Never There in the First Place”

Finding the female in Roman poetry

chapter |23 pages

Reading Broken Skin

Violence in Roman elegy