Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : : religious innovation and the imperial family / / Darja Šterbenc Erker.

"Ovid's Fasti offers multifocal views of Augustan religion to convey ambivalences, inconsistencies and paradoxes in the imperial family's religious agenda. Darja Sterbenc Erker explores Ovid's irreverent and ambiguous presentations of calendrical aeitiologies, deifications and im...

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Superior document:Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava
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Place / Publishing House:Leiden : : BRILL,, 2023.
Year of Publication:2023
Language:English
Series:Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xv, 297 pages).
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spelling Erker, Darja Šterbenc, author.
Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family / Darja Šterbenc Erker.
Leiden : BRILL, 2023.
1 online resource (xv, 297 pages).
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (BRILL, viewed May 28, 2023).
"Ovid's Fasti offers multifocal views of Augustan religion to convey ambivalences, inconsistencies and paradoxes in the imperial family's religious agenda. Darja Sterbenc Erker explores Ovid's irreverent and ambiguous presentations of calendrical aeitiologies, deifications and imperial gods that humorously call to mind Arachne's tapestry depicting faulty gods and that stand in sharp contrast to the poet's more serious discussions of the values he cherishes, such as freedom and poetic immortality. Especially in the exilic revisions of the poem, Ovid emphasises the motif of bestowing divine honours upon mortals through poetry. For him, the stars in the heavens do not represent deified statesmen but immortal authors".
Text in English; selections in Latin with English translations.
Part 1: The religious self-legitimation of the domus Augusta -- 1 Inventing ambivalent aetiologies of the Concordia Augusta -- 1 From antiquarian to elegiac inquiry into the religious traditions of Rome -- 2 The goddess Concordia: past and present -- 3 Livia and Concordia -- 4 Elegiac play with political and familial Concordia -- 5 The etymology of June and Ovid as an impartial judge -- 6 Conclusion: Ovid's invention of Concordia Augusta aetiologies -- 2 Pax Augusta -- 1 From marble, painted or book calendar to Ovid's Fasti -- 2 Intermedial shifts: from Ara Pacis Augustae to Ovid's aetiological elegy -- 3 The Pax Augusta born out of imperial triumphs -- 4 From Augustus' closing the doors of Janus' temple to Ovid's Janus -- 5 Ovidian notion of peace -- 6 Conclusion: contesting the Pax Augusta -- Part 2: Deification -- 3 Catasterisms and deifications -- 1 The transmission of Hellenistic deification from Alexandria to Rome -- 2 Augustus and deification -- 3 Germanicus as divine protector and other deifications in Ovid's Fasti -- 4 Germanicus as a fellow poet -- 5 Germanicus and the immortality of the poets -- 6 Conclusion: poetic deification -- 4 Romulus' Apotheosis as model for Julius Caesar's and Augustus' deification -- 1 Romulus' calendar failure -- 2 Apotheosis of Romulus -- 3 Do divine origins pave the way for the apotheosis? -- 4 Playing with deifications -- 5 Cicero on Julius Proculus' vision of the epiphany of Romulus-Quirinus -- 6 Livy's account of Romulus' epiphany -- 7 Dionysius' Romulus-Quirinus: addressee of a hero cult -- 8 Ovid's ambivalent representation of Romulus' epiphany as the god Quirinus -- 9 Deifications and Stultorum Festa -- 10 Untrustworthy narrator and imperial deifications -- 11 Reception of the Ovidian narrator in early imperial literature -- 5 The aetiology of Servius Tullius and Fortuna -- 1 Elegiac cultural memories of Fortuna's temple -- 2 Augustus' divinity and his divine ancestors -- 3 Fortuna and Servius Tullius -- 4 Conspiring for the throne -- 5 Conclusion: Ovid's competing cultural memories of Rome -- Part 3: Ambiguities in Augustus' religion -- 6 Augustus' religious self-fashioning -- 1 Augustus' attempts to approach the sphere of gods and good rulers -- 2 Augustus' accumulation of priesthoods -- 3 Augustus' restoration of Roman religion -- 4 Augustus' honorific titles -- 5 Conclusion: Augustus' divine charisma -- 7 Ambiguity of Augustus' religious innovations -- 1 Augustus and the goddess Vesta -- 2 The Lares and Genius Augusti -- 3 Innovations within the Lares Compitales cult -- 4 Conclusion: the ambiguity of Augustus' gods and religious innovations -- Part 4: Conclusion -- The imperial family's religion and Ovid's ironic ambiguity.
Ambiguity in literature.
Ovid, 43 B.C.-17 A.D. or 18 A.D. Fasti.
Augustus, Emperor of Rome, 63 B.C.-14 A.D. In literature.
Literary criticism. lcgft
90-04-52703-6
Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava.
language English
format eBook
author Erker, Darja Šterbenc,
spellingShingle Erker, Darja Šterbenc,
Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family /
Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava
Part 1:
The religious self-legitimation of the domus Augusta -- 1 Inventing ambivalent aetiologies of the Concordia Augusta -- 1 From antiquarian to elegiac inquiry into the religious traditions of Rome -- 2 The goddess Concordia: past and present -- 3 Livia and Concordia -- 4 Elegiac play with political and familial Concordia -- 5 The etymology of June and Ovid as an impartial judge -- 6 Conclusion: Ovid's invention of Concordia Augusta aetiologies -- 2 Pax Augusta -- 1 From marble, painted or book calendar to Ovid's Fasti -- 2 Intermedial shifts: from Ara Pacis Augustae to Ovid's aetiological elegy -- 3 The Pax Augusta born out of imperial triumphs -- 4 From Augustus' closing the doors of Janus' temple to Ovid's Janus -- 5 Ovidian notion of peace -- 6 Conclusion: contesting the Pax Augusta -- Part 2: Deification -- 3 Catasterisms and deifications -- 1 The transmission of Hellenistic deification from Alexandria to Rome -- 2 Augustus and deification -- 3 Germanicus as divine protector and other deifications in Ovid's Fasti -- 4 Germanicus as a fellow poet -- 5 Germanicus and the immortality of the poets -- 6 Conclusion: poetic deification -- 4 Romulus' Apotheosis as model for Julius Caesar's and Augustus' deification -- 1 Romulus' calendar failure -- 2 Apotheosis of Romulus --
Do divine origins pave the way for the apotheosis? -- 4 Playing with deifications -- 5 Cicero on Julius Proculus' vision of the epiphany of Romulus-Quirinus -- 6 Livy's account of Romulus' epiphany -- 7 Dionysius' Romulus-Quirinus: addressee of a hero cult -- 8 Ovid's ambivalent representation of Romulus' epiphany as the god Quirinus -- 9 Deifications and Stultorum Festa -- 10 Untrustworthy narrator and imperial deifications -- 11 Reception of the Ovidian narrator in early imperial literature -- 5 The aetiology of Servius Tullius and Fortuna -- 1 Elegiac cultural memories of Fortuna's temple -- 2 Augustus' divinity and his divine ancestors -- 3 Fortuna and Servius Tullius -- 4 Conspiring for the throne -- 5 Conclusion: Ovid's competing cultural memories of Rome -- Part 3: Ambiguities in Augustus' religion -- 6 Augustus' religious self-fashioning -- 1 Augustus' attempts to approach the sphere of gods and good rulers -- 2 Augustus' accumulation of priesthoods -- 3 Augustus' restoration of Roman religion -- 4 Augustus' honorific titles -- 5 Conclusion: Augustus' divine charisma -- 7 Ambiguity of Augustus' religious innovations -- 1 Augustus and the goddess Vesta -- 2 The Lares and Genius Augusti -- 3 Innovations within the Lares Compitales cult -- 4 Conclusion: the ambiguity of Augustus' gods and religious innovations -- Part 4: Conclusion -- The imperial family's religion and Ovid's ironic ambiguity.
author_facet Erker, Darja Šterbenc,
author_variant d s e ds dse
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Erker, Darja Šterbenc,
title Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family /
title_sub religious innovation and the imperial family /
title_full Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family / Darja Šterbenc Erker.
title_fullStr Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family / Darja Šterbenc Erker.
title_full_unstemmed Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family / Darja Šterbenc Erker.
title_auth Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family /
title_alt The religious self-legitimation of the domus Augusta -- 1 Inventing ambivalent aetiologies of the Concordia Augusta -- 1 From antiquarian to elegiac inquiry into the religious traditions of Rome -- 2 The goddess Concordia: past and present -- 3 Livia and Concordia -- 4 Elegiac play with political and familial Concordia -- 5 The etymology of June and Ovid as an impartial judge -- 6 Conclusion: Ovid's invention of Concordia Augusta aetiologies -- 2 Pax Augusta -- 1 From marble, painted or book calendar to Ovid's Fasti -- 2 Intermedial shifts: from Ara Pacis Augustae to Ovid's aetiological elegy -- 3 The Pax Augusta born out of imperial triumphs -- 4 From Augustus' closing the doors of Janus' temple to Ovid's Janus -- 5 Ovidian notion of peace -- 6 Conclusion: contesting the Pax Augusta -- Part 2: Deification -- 3 Catasterisms and deifications -- 1 The transmission of Hellenistic deification from Alexandria to Rome -- 2 Augustus and deification -- 3 Germanicus as divine protector and other deifications in Ovid's Fasti -- 4 Germanicus as a fellow poet -- 5 Germanicus and the immortality of the poets -- 6 Conclusion: poetic deification -- 4 Romulus' Apotheosis as model for Julius Caesar's and Augustus' deification -- 1 Romulus' calendar failure -- 2 Apotheosis of Romulus --
Do divine origins pave the way for the apotheosis? -- 4 Playing with deifications -- 5 Cicero on Julius Proculus' vision of the epiphany of Romulus-Quirinus -- 6 Livy's account of Romulus' epiphany -- 7 Dionysius' Romulus-Quirinus: addressee of a hero cult -- 8 Ovid's ambivalent representation of Romulus' epiphany as the god Quirinus -- 9 Deifications and Stultorum Festa -- 10 Untrustworthy narrator and imperial deifications -- 11 Reception of the Ovidian narrator in early imperial literature -- 5 The aetiology of Servius Tullius and Fortuna -- 1 Elegiac cultural memories of Fortuna's temple -- 2 Augustus' divinity and his divine ancestors -- 3 Fortuna and Servius Tullius -- 4 Conspiring for the throne -- 5 Conclusion: Ovid's competing cultural memories of Rome -- Part 3: Ambiguities in Augustus' religion -- 6 Augustus' religious self-fashioning -- 1 Augustus' attempts to approach the sphere of gods and good rulers -- 2 Augustus' accumulation of priesthoods -- 3 Augustus' restoration of Roman religion -- 4 Augustus' honorific titles -- 5 Conclusion: Augustus' divine charisma -- 7 Ambiguity of Augustus' religious innovations -- 1 Augustus and the goddess Vesta -- 2 The Lares and Genius Augusti -- 3 Innovations within the Lares Compitales cult -- 4 Conclusion: the ambiguity of Augustus' gods and religious innovations -- Part 4: Conclusion -- The imperial family's religion and Ovid's ironic ambiguity.
title_new Ambiguity and Religion in Ovid's Fasti :
title_sort ambiguity and religion in ovid's fasti : religious innovation and the imperial family /
series Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava
series2 Mnemosyne, bibliotheca classica Batava
publisher BRILL,
publishDate 2023
physical 1 online resource (xv, 297 pages).
contents Part 1:
The religious self-legitimation of the domus Augusta -- 1 Inventing ambivalent aetiologies of the Concordia Augusta -- 1 From antiquarian to elegiac inquiry into the religious traditions of Rome -- 2 The goddess Concordia: past and present -- 3 Livia and Concordia -- 4 Elegiac play with political and familial Concordia -- 5 The etymology of June and Ovid as an impartial judge -- 6 Conclusion: Ovid's invention of Concordia Augusta aetiologies -- 2 Pax Augusta -- 1 From marble, painted or book calendar to Ovid's Fasti -- 2 Intermedial shifts: from Ara Pacis Augustae to Ovid's aetiological elegy -- 3 The Pax Augusta born out of imperial triumphs -- 4 From Augustus' closing the doors of Janus' temple to Ovid's Janus -- 5 Ovidian notion of peace -- 6 Conclusion: contesting the Pax Augusta -- Part 2: Deification -- 3 Catasterisms and deifications -- 1 The transmission of Hellenistic deification from Alexandria to Rome -- 2 Augustus and deification -- 3 Germanicus as divine protector and other deifications in Ovid's Fasti -- 4 Germanicus as a fellow poet -- 5 Germanicus and the immortality of the poets -- 6 Conclusion: poetic deification -- 4 Romulus' Apotheosis as model for Julius Caesar's and Augustus' deification -- 1 Romulus' calendar failure -- 2 Apotheosis of Romulus --
Do divine origins pave the way for the apotheosis? -- 4 Playing with deifications -- 5 Cicero on Julius Proculus' vision of the epiphany of Romulus-Quirinus -- 6 Livy's account of Romulus' epiphany -- 7 Dionysius' Romulus-Quirinus: addressee of a hero cult -- 8 Ovid's ambivalent representation of Romulus' epiphany as the god Quirinus -- 9 Deifications and Stultorum Festa -- 10 Untrustworthy narrator and imperial deifications -- 11 Reception of the Ovidian narrator in early imperial literature -- 5 The aetiology of Servius Tullius and Fortuna -- 1 Elegiac cultural memories of Fortuna's temple -- 2 Augustus' divinity and his divine ancestors -- 3 Fortuna and Servius Tullius -- 4 Conspiring for the throne -- 5 Conclusion: Ovid's competing cultural memories of Rome -- Part 3: Ambiguities in Augustus' religion -- 6 Augustus' religious self-fashioning -- 1 Augustus' attempts to approach the sphere of gods and good rulers -- 2 Augustus' accumulation of priesthoods -- 3 Augustus' restoration of Roman religion -- 4 Augustus' honorific titles -- 5 Conclusion: Augustus' divine charisma -- 7 Ambiguity of Augustus' religious innovations -- 1 Augustus and the goddess Vesta -- 2 The Lares and Genius Augusti -- 3 Innovations within the Lares Compitales cult -- 4 Conclusion: the ambiguity of Augustus' gods and religious innovations -- Part 4: Conclusion -- The imperial family's religion and Ovid's ironic ambiguity.
isbn 90-04-52704-4
90-04-52703-6
callnumber-first P - Language and Literature
callnumber-subject PN - General Literature
callnumber-label PN56
callnumber-sort PN 256 A55 E754 42023
genre Literary criticism. lcgft
genre_facet Literary criticism.
era_facet 43 B.C.-17 A.D. or 18 A.D.
63 B.C.-14 A.D.
illustrated Not Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 800 - Literature
dewey-tens 800 - Literature, rhetoric & criticism
dewey-ones 809 - History, description & criticism
dewey-full 809.04
dewey-sort 3809.04
dewey-raw 809.04
dewey-search 809.04
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