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Ovid's Art and the Wife of Bath - The Ethics of Erotic Violence (Paperback, Annotated edition)
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Ovid's Art and the Wife of Bath - The Ethics of Erotic Violence (Paperback, Annotated edition)
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Ovid's Art and the Wife of Bath examines how Ovid's Ars amatoria
shaped the erotic discourses of the medieval West. The Ars amatoria
circulated in medieval France and England as an authoritative
treatise on desire; consequently, the sexualities of the medieval
West are haunted by the imperial Roman constructions of desire that
emerge from Ovid's text. The Ars amatoria ironically proposes the
erotic potential of violence, and this aspect of the Ars proved to
be enormously influential. Ovid's discourse on erotic violence
provides a script for Heloise's epistolary expression of desire for
Abelard. The Roman de la Rose extends the directives of the Ars
with a rhetorical flourish and poetic excess that tests the limits
of Ovidian irony. While Christine de Pizan critiqued the
representations of erotic violence in the Rose, Chaucer
appropriates the Ovidian discourse from the Roman de la Rose to
construct the Wife of Bath a female figure that today's readers
find uncannily familiar. Well written and provocative, this book
will interest scholars of premodern literature, especially those
who work on Medieval English and French, as well as classical,
texts. Marilynn Desmond draws on feminist and queer theory, which
places Ovid's Art and the Wife of Bath at the cutting edge of
debates in gender and sexuality."
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