Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in Prudentius

Richard Bentley famously called Prudentius ‘Christianorum Maro et Flaccus’. Recent work has explored the extent and detail of Prudentius’ Virgilian intertextuality, most notably in the allegorical epic the Psychomachia, but also in many others of his works. Horatian lyric is laid under contribution...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Philip Hardie
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Université Lille-3 2024-12-01
Series:Dictynna
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/dictynna/3772
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832577869640892416
author Philip Hardie
author_facet Philip Hardie
author_sort Philip Hardie
collection DOAJ
description Richard Bentley famously called Prudentius ‘Christianorum Maro et Flaccus’. Recent work has explored the extent and detail of Prudentius’ Virgilian intertextuality, most notably in the allegorical epic the Psychomachia, but also in many others of his works. Horatian lyric is laid under contribution not just in the lyric metres of the hymns in the Cathemerinon. The personal Praefatio and Epilogus allude mostly to Horace, and hardly at all to Virgil (not surprising, given Horace’s use of first-person genres in autobiographical mode). In this paper I focus on allusion to a poet arguably almost as important for Prudentius as Virgil and Horace, Ovid. In particular, I look at Prudentius’ allusion to the themes and language of Ovidian metamorphosis.
format Article
id doaj-art-085bac3f8234486095d5522e130a40df
institution Kabale University
issn 1969-4202
1765-3142
language deu
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Université Lille-3
record_format Article
series Dictynna
spelling doaj-art-085bac3f8234486095d5522e130a40df2025-01-30T14:29:03ZdeuUniversité Lille-3Dictynna1969-42021765-31422024-12-012110.4000/12vk3Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in PrudentiusPhilip HardieRichard Bentley famously called Prudentius ‘Christianorum Maro et Flaccus’. Recent work has explored the extent and detail of Prudentius’ Virgilian intertextuality, most notably in the allegorical epic the Psychomachia, but also in many others of his works. Horatian lyric is laid under contribution not just in the lyric metres of the hymns in the Cathemerinon. The personal Praefatio and Epilogus allude mostly to Horace, and hardly at all to Virgil (not surprising, given Horace’s use of first-person genres in autobiographical mode). In this paper I focus on allusion to a poet arguably almost as important for Prudentius as Virgil and Horace, Ovid. In particular, I look at Prudentius’ allusion to the themes and language of Ovidian metamorphosis.https://journals.openedition.org/dictynna/3772intertextualitymetamorphosisKontrastimitationmosaicmoralizationecphrasis
spellingShingle Philip Hardie
Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in Prudentius
Dictynna
intertextuality
metamorphosis
Kontrastimitation
mosaic
moralization
ecphrasis
title Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in Prudentius
title_full Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in Prudentius
title_fullStr Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in Prudentius
title_full_unstemmed Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in Prudentius
title_short Ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in Prudentius
title_sort ovidian intertextuality and metamorphosis in prudentius
topic intertextuality
metamorphosis
Kontrastimitation
mosaic
moralization
ecphrasis
url https://journals.openedition.org/dictynna/3772
work_keys_str_mv AT philiphardie ovidianintertextualityandmetamorphosisinprudentius