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{{Journal-Top}}<div style="padding-top: 30px;"> | {{Journal-Top}}{{SHORTDESC:The tale of Pygmalion from book 10 of Ovid’s “Metamorphoses.”}}<div style="padding-top: 30px;"> | ||
[[File:Jean-Léon Gérôme, Pygmalion and Galatea, ca. 1890.jpg|thumb|Jean-Léon Gérôme, ''Pygmalion and Galatea'', ca. 1890.]] | [[File:Jean-Léon Gérôme, Pygmalion and Galatea, ca. 1890.jpg|thumb|Jean-Léon Gérôme, ''Pygmalion and Galatea'', ca. 1890.]] | ||
{{Center|{{Large|Pygmalion}}{{refn|The story of Pygmalion is narrated by [[Ovid's Metamorphoses#Orpheus|Orpheus]] who is bitter from having lost Euridice to Hades. In his prologue, he states the subject of his narrative: “I sing of boys the gods have loved, and girls / incited by unlawful lust and passions, / who paid the penalty for their transgressions.”}}<br /> | {{Center|{{Large|Pygmalion}}{{refn|The story of Pygmalion is narrated by [[Ovid's Metamorphoses#Orpheus|Orpheus]] who is bitter from having lost Euridice to Hades. In his prologue, he states the subject of his narrative: “I sing of boys the gods have loved, and girls / incited by unlawful lust and passions, / who paid the penalty for their transgressions.”<br />{{sp}}The story of Pygmalion, found in Book 10 of Ovid’s ''Metamorphoses'', is an exploration of artistry, desire, transformation, and the nature of human connection. It follows Pygmalion, a sculptor who creates an ivory statue so perfect that he falls deeply in love with his creation. Dissatisfied with the flaws he perceives in real women, Pygmalion retreats into his art, crafting an idealized form that embodies his unattainable vision of beauty and virtue. His devotion is rewarded by the goddess Venus, who animates the statue, transforming it into a living woman with whom Pygmalion can share his life.<br />{{Sp}}This tale is steeped in themes that resonate across cultures and time. It reflects on the interplay between creation and creator, the boundaries between reality and imagination, and the transformative power of love. Pygmalion’s story also carries undercurrents of critique regarding gender roles and the idealization of women, as the statue initially embodies an unrealistically perfect ideal molded by male fantasy. Ovid’s treatment of this myth reveals his characteristic wit and his ability to explore universal human desires, offering readers a complex meditation on art, devotion, and the pursuit of perfection.}}<br /> | ||
By: [[w:Ovid|Ovid]] from book 10 of the ''[[w:Metamorphoses|Metamorphoses]]''<ref>{{cite book |last=Ovid |first= |date=1993 |orig-year=8 |title=The Metamorphoses of Ovid |translator-last=Mandelbaum |translator-first=Allen |url= |location=New York |publisher=A Harvest Book |pages=335–37 |isbn= |author-link= |ref=harv }}</ref> }} | By: [[w:Ovid|Ovid]] from book 10 of the ''[[w:Metamorphoses|Metamorphoses]]''<ref>{{cite book |last=Ovid |first= |date=1993 |orig-year=8 |title=The Metamorphoses of Ovid |translator-last=Mandelbaum |translator-first=Allen |url= |location=New York |publisher=A Harvest Book |pages=335–37 |isbn= |author-link= |ref=harv }}</ref> }} | ||
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Revision as of 16:57, 6 January 2025
Pygmalion had seen the shameless lives |
notes
- ↑ The story of Pygmalion is narrated by Orpheus who is bitter from having lost Euridice to Hades. In his prologue, he states the subject of his narrative: “I sing of boys the gods have loved, and girls / incited by unlawful lust and passions, / who paid the penalty for their transgressions.”
The story of Pygmalion, found in Book 10 of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, is an exploration of artistry, desire, transformation, and the nature of human connection. It follows Pygmalion, a sculptor who creates an ivory statue so perfect that he falls deeply in love with his creation. Dissatisfied with the flaws he perceives in real women, Pygmalion retreats into his art, crafting an idealized form that embodies his unattainable vision of beauty and virtue. His devotion is rewarded by the goddess Venus, who animates the statue, transforming it into a living woman with whom Pygmalion can share his life.
This tale is steeped in themes that resonate across cultures and time. It reflects on the interplay between creation and creator, the boundaries between reality and imagination, and the transformative power of love. Pygmalion’s story also carries undercurrents of critique regarding gender roles and the idealization of women, as the statue initially embodies an unrealistically perfect ideal molded by male fantasy. Ovid’s treatment of this myth reveals his characteristic wit and his ability to explore universal human desires, offering readers a complex meditation on art, devotion, and the pursuit of perfection. - ↑ Ovid (1993) [8]. The Metamorphoses of Ovid. Translated by Mandelbaum, Allen. New York: A Harvest Book. pp. 335–37.
- ↑ I doubt he had much say, really. He seems like a pig, really, suggesting that all women are whores “by nature.” Likely, none of them gave him the time of day, so he developed his misogyny as perhaps literature’s first incel.
- ↑ Purple or red, an expensive Phoenician dye from shellfish.
- ↑ Galatea, unnamed here by Ovid.