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dc.contributor.authorBorowski, Pawel
dc.contributor.authorStead, Henry
dc.date.accessioned2021-03-05T11:30:09Z
dc.date.available2021-03-05T11:30:09Z
dc.date.issued2020-12-18
dc.identifier272661582
dc.identifier69babe93-cc1f-46e9-a49c-eccb6bb7f8d0
dc.identifier85143242727
dc.identifier.citationBorowski , P & Stead , H 2020 , ' “Ovid’s Old Age” : Jacek Kaczmarski and the sung poetry of exile ' , Clotho , vol. 2 , no. 2 , pp. 5-38 . https://doi.org/10.4312/clotho.2.2.5-38en
dc.identifier.issn2670-6210
dc.identifier.otherRIS: urn:0D1173657A1FBA1211E8A5DA169E8E12
dc.identifier.otherORCID: /0000-0002-7749-0592/work/90112821
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10023/21562
dc.description.abstract“Ovid’s Old Age” is a sung poem written by the Polish poet and musician Jacek Kaczmarski (1957–2004) which engages with the myth of Ovid’s exile. Kaczmarski’s works were heavily influenced both by classical culture and his experience of political emigration during the communist era. He was famed as an unofficial bard of the opposition movement, but is as yet little known to classical reception scholars. This paper presents Kaczmarski’s creative engagement with Ovid as both a deeply personal reflection on the nature of exile and at the same time a universal commentary on poetry under authoritarian regimes. Our interpretation is based on a thematic analysis of the poem, including landscape, imperialism, displacement, “national” poets in exile, nostalgia, and the force of poetry. We set the reception in its social, political, and biographical context, with reference to several mediating receptions of the Ovidian exile. In Kaczmarski’s poem, the Ovidian voice helps the poet to express the trials of emigration and reveals their effect on his art. It shows how engagements with classical culture may flourish, even while the formal discipline of Classics has been undernourished. We provide a bilingual translation of “Ovid’s Old Age” to foster the understanding of migratory experiences in contemporary poetry and enrich international scholarship on the reception of Ovid with a response from communist Poland.
dc.format.extent34
dc.format.extent713185
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.ispartofClothoen
dc.subjectExileen
dc.subjectJacek Kaczmarskien
dc.subjectClassical receptionen
dc.subjectPolanden
dc.subjectOviden
dc.subjectSung poetryen
dc.subjectCommunismen
dc.subjectDAW Central Europeen
dc.subjectDE The Mediterranean Region. The Greco-Roman Worlden
dc.subjectP Philology. Linguisticsen
dc.subjectT-NDASen
dc.subjectSDG 2 - Zero Hungeren
dc.subjectSDG 10 - Reduced Inequalitiesen
dc.subject.lccDAWen
dc.subject.lccDEen
dc.subject.lccP1en
dc.title“Ovid’s Old Age” : Jacek Kaczmarski and the sung poetry of exileen
dc.typeJournal articleen
dc.contributor.institutionUniversity of St Andrews. School of Classicsen
dc.identifier.doi10.4312/clotho.2.2.5-38
dc.description.statusPeer revieweden


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