Available Formats
Ovid's Metamorphoses and the Environmental Imagination
By (Author) Giulia Sissa
Edited by Francesca Martelli
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
20th February 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: poetry and poets
Classic and pre-20th century poetry
Narrative theme: Environmental issues / the natural world
Ancient Sagas and epics
871.01
Paperback
264
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book positions Ovids Metamorphoses as a foundational text in the western history of environmental thought. The poem is about new bodies. Stones, springs, plants and animals materialize out of human origins to create a world of hybrid objects, which retain varying degrees of human subjectivity while taking on new physical form. In bending the boundaries of known categories of being, these hybrid entities reveal both the porousness of human and other agencies as well as the dangers released by their fusion. Metamorphosis unsettles the category of the human within the complex ecologies that make up the world as we know it. Drawing on a range of modern environmental theorists and approaches, the contributors to this volume trace how the Metamorphoses models the relationship between humans and other life forms in ways that resonate with the preoccupations of contemporary eco-criticism. They make the case for seeing the worldview depicted in Ovids poem as an exemplar of the premodern ecological mindset that contemporary environmental thought seeks to approximate. They also highlight critical moments in the history of the poems ecological reception, including reflections by a contemporary poet, as well as studies of Medieval and Renaissance responses to Ovid.
Ovids environment is a very obvious and at the same time an extremely complicated topic. Ovids Metamorphoses and the Environmental Imagination interrogates the Ovidian text with new questions, which encourage us to rethink the role of the non-human world in the Metamorphoses and beyond. -- Simona Martorana, Humboldt Research Fellow, Kiel University and University of Hamburg, Germany
Giulia Sissa is Distinguished Professor of Political Science, Comparative Literature and Classics at UCLA, USA. She is the author of The Daily Life of the Greek Gods (with M. Detienne, 2000), Greek Virginity (1990), Sex and Sensuality in the Ancient World (2008), Jealousy: A Forbidden Passion (2017) and Le Pouvoir des femmes. Un dfi pour la dmocratie (2021). Francesca Martelli is Associate Professor of Classics at UCLA, USA. She is the author of Ovid (2020) and Ovids Revisions (2013).