El «travestimiento burlesco» de Hércules en Ov. Her. IX. (55-118)

  1. Alba Blázquez Noya
Aldizkaria:
Studia philologica valentina

ISSN: 1135-9560

Argitalpen urtea: 2017

Zenbakien izenburua: QUAERITE ET INVENIETIS. CONTRIBUCIONES A LA INVESTIGACIÓN EN ESTUDIOS CLÁSICOS

Zenbakia: 1

Orrialdeak: 87-94

Mota: Artikulua

Beste argitalpen batzuk: Studia philologica valentina

Laburpena

Hercules, traditionally considered the great hero of the Greeks, the symbol of salvation and the incarnation of masculinity, receives a strong «de-heroizing» treatment in Ovid’s Letter from Deianira to Hercules, a work in which a whole passage paints him completely as a cross-dresser. We refer to the passage that narrated Hercules’s time as a slave (and lover) of Omphale in Lydia. In this article we see how Deianira utilizes the standards of the model of ideal masculinity to ridicule her husband by reminding him of the times he did not live up to that model, and applies to Hercules practically all of the elegiac code of the lover as a servant at the orders of his domina