Nature imitates art--not a paradox from Oscar Wilde's pen, but instead the bold formulation of the Latin poet Ovid (43 BCE-17 CE), marking a radical turning point in ancient aesthetics, founded on the principle of mimesis. For Ovid, art is independent of reality, not its mirror: by enhancing
phantasia, the artist's creative imagination and the simulacrum's primacy over reality, Ovid opens up unexplored perspectives for future European literature and art. Through an examination of Narcissus and Pygmalion, figures of illusion and desire, who are the protagonists of two major episodes of
the Metamorphoses, Rosati sheds light on some crucial junctures in the history of reception and aesthetics. Narcissus and Pygmalion has, since its first publication in Italian, contributed to the poet's critical fortunes over the past few decades through its combination of sophisticated literary
critical thinking and patient argument applied to the poetics of self-reflexivity and, in particular, to the fundamental interface between the verbal and the visual in the Metamorphoses. A substantial introduction accompanies this new translation into English, positioning Rosati's work anew in the
forefront of current discussions of Ovidian aesthetics and intermediality, in the wake of the postmodern culture of the simulacrum.
Author(s): Gianpiero Rosati
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 208
City: Oxford
Cover
Narcissus and Pygmalion: Illusion and Spectacle in Ovid’s Metamorphoses
Copyright
Contents
Introduction
1) Narcissus and Pygmalion today
2) Simulacrum and the power of the gaze
3) Narcissism and intertextuality
4) Self-love, construction of the other: the primacy of the simulacrum
1: Narcissus or Literary Illusion
1. The myth: origins and developments
2. Echo and Narcissus: the deception of the reflection
3. Literary fiction and poetic narcissism
2: Pygmalion or the Poetics of Fiction
1. The outline of the myth
2. Pygmalion and Narcissus
3. A poetics of literariness
3: The Spectacle of Appearances
1. The trap of illusions
2. The spectacle of metamorphosis
3. The spectacle of the word
4. Conclusions
Bibliography
Index Locorum
General Index