TY - BOOK AU - White,Paul ED - Project Muse. TI - Renaissance Postscripts : : Responding to Ovid's Heroides in Sixteenth-Century France / T2 - Text and context SN - 9780814271674 PY - 2009/// CY - Columbus PB - Ohio State University Press KW - Ovidius Naso, Publius. KW - Ovid, KW - Heroides (Ovid) KW - fast KW - Poesie epistolaire latine KW - Histoire et critique KW - Rezeption KW - gnd KW - Epistolary poetry, Latin KW - Art appreciation KW - LITERARY CRITICISM KW - General KW - bisacsh KW - History and criticism KW - Frankreich KW - France KW - Criticism, interpretation, etc KW - Electronic books. KW - local N1 - Responding to Ovid's Heroides -- Uses of the Heroides in education -- Editions and commentaries -- The Heroides in translation -- Replying to the Heroides; Open Access N2 - "Ovid's Heroides, a collection consisting mainly of poetic love letters sent by mythological heroines to their absent lovers, held a particular fascination for Renaissance readers. To understand their responses to these letters, we must ask exactly how and in what contexts those readers first encountered them: were they read in Latin or in the vernacular; as source texts for the learning of grammar and history or as love poetry; as epistolary and rhetorical models or as moral examples?" "Renaissance Postscripts: Responding to Ovid: Heroides in Sixteenth-Century France by Paul White offers an account of the wide variety of responses to the Heroides within the realm of humanist education, in the works of both Latin commentators and French translators, and as an example of a particular mode of imitation. The author examines how humanists shaped the discourse of Ovid's heroines and heroes to pedagogical ends and analyzes even the woodcuts that illustrated various editions. This study traces comparative readings of French translations through a period noted for important shifts in attitudes to the text and to poetic translation in general and offers an important history of the "reply epistle"--A mode of imitation attempted in both Latin and the vernacular. Renaissance Postscripts shows that while the Heroides was a versatile text that could serve a wide range of pedagogical and literary purposes, it was also a text that resisted the attempts of its interpreters to have the final word."--Jacket UR - https://muse.jhu.edu/book/27809/ ER -