Strategies of tension (Ovid, Heroides 4)
1996; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 41; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1017/s0068673500001905
ISSN2053-5899
Autores Tópico(s)Classical Antiquity Studies
ResumoFor Stefania The Amazon's son Two things distinguish Phaedra's from the other letters in Ovid's Heroides . In the first place, Phaedra's is not a letter without consequences. On the contrary, it will have a decisive effect on the addressee. But above all, Phaedra's letter is important just as a letter . The very fact of Phaedra's writing a letter touches a fundamental point in the story, and a controversial one. In the Heroides problems of communication are important in themselves, but, after the gratuitous letters by Penelope, Phyllis and Briseis, this is the first (and it will remain the only one) in which the complication always caused by an epistolary intrusion into the body of the story is superimposed on a pre-existent problem. Phaedra's declaration of her love to Hippolytus is a crucial point, a turning-point for the various tragic treatments of the history. Ovid adds problem to problem.
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