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Augustan Love: Propertius and Ovid

Augustan Love: Propertius and Ovid

Love poetry during the Augustan period is notable for the elegiac genre, a short-lived but significant body of poetry which represents the poet as enslaved and entirely dominated by his mistress.

The Roman World · Dr Rhiannon Evans

September 18, 201337m 55s

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Show Notes

Love poetry during the Augustan period is notable for the elegiac genre, a short-lived but significant body of poetry which represents the poet as enslaved and entirely dominated by his mistress. This lectures examines the love poetry of Propertius and Ovid, and also looks at Ovid's controversial poem, The Art of Love, which trivialised the family values being promoted by Augustus, and was probably responsible for the harsh punishment imposed by the emperor: the poet's exile to the Black Sea.

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Topics

La TrobeUniversitychris mackiechristopher mackiehistoryancient historyromeromanrhiannon evanspropertiusovidpoetrylove poems