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Abstract
Number Winter 2008, Pages 1–31
Posted online on January 18, 2008.
(doi:10.1525/rep.2008.101.1.1)
Inscribing Orpheus: Ovid and the Invention of a Greco-Roman Corpus Elizabeth Marie Young This paper analyzes the Orpheus episode in Ovid's Metamorphoses as a site that investigates the widespread Augustan ambition of constructing a synthetic literary corpus encompassing both Archaic Greece and contemporary Rome. The tale's ongoing manipulations of form (Orpheus's bodily form, generic form, narrative form) expose the paradoxes riddling this emerging—and enduring—notion of an organic Greco-Romanism.
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