Ovid’s Metamorphoses
- All levels
- 21 and older
- $315
- Earn 3,150 reward points
- 68 Jay St, Brooklyn, NY
- 12 hours over 4 sessions
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Brooklyn Institute for Social Research @ 68 Jay St, Brooklyn, NY
Explore the profound insights of Erich Auerbach's "Mimesis" in a journey through Western literary tradition. Join us as we delve into Auerbach's groundbreaking analysis, unraveling the complexities of literary representation from Homer to modernity.
May 14th
6:30–9:30pm EDT
Meets 4 Times
Ovid begins his Metamorphoses, “My soul would speak of bodies changed into new forms,” and it is the great theme of physical transformation that unites the poem’s many myths: humans becomes animals and plants, and vice versa; humans becomes stones and constellations; and humans change their sex. No poem from antiquity has so influenced Western European literature and art. Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, and Dante creatively raided Ovid’s tales of transformation and terror, as did the artists Titian, Brueghel, and Bernini. The Metamorphoses present a compendium of Greek and Roman mythology, with heroes and heroines of prior myths transforming from figures of divine power to figures of aesthetic play, provocation, political charge, and critique. What sort of poem is the Metamorphoses: epic, tragedy, universal history? How does it compare to its Greek forebears—and why, arguably even more so than Homer, has it proven so massively influential?
In this class, we will read the whole of the Metamorphoses (as translated by Allen Mandlebaum), considering, as we go, their treatments of love and violence, of desire, horror, and the uncanny, and of the permeable boundaries between animals, humans, and gods. We’ll discuss the work’s influence, legacy, and contemporary meanings. And, we’ll ask after the political force of a poem about the mutability of all things. How might the transformations of the Metamorphoses present an oppositional voice to absolute power (and even to divinity) and to Rome’s claims of imperium sine fine—”empire without end”?
Instructors will contact students approximately one week prior to the first class with reading assignments and details about the course location.
In any event where a customer wants to cancel their enrollment and is eligible for a full refund, a 5% processing fee will be deducted from the refund amount.
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The Brooklyn Institute for Social Research was established in 2011 in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn. Its mission is to extend liberal arts education and research far beyond the borders of the traditional university, supporting community education needs and opening up new possibilities for scholarship in the...
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Brooklyn Institute for Social Research
Brooklyn
68 Jay St
Btwn Water & Front Streets
Brooklyn, New York 11201 Brooklyn
68 Jay St
Btwn Water & Front Streets
Brooklyn, New York 11201
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