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A Arte De Amar eBook

by Ovídio
language: brazilian portuguese
Publisher: Lebooks Editora, October of 2020 ‧
1,90€
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Ovidio é reconhecido como o último dos grandes poetas da era de Augusto, Depois de abandonar uma carreira política em favor de uma vida de poesia nos redutos literários de Roma, Ovídio encontrou sucesso imediato com suas primeiras investidas nas elegias de amor. A Arte de Amar é uma das obras mais conhecidas de Ovídio e, provavelmente a responsável de seu banimento de Roma, uma vez que a apologia ao amor extraconjugal foi considerada uma afronta aos princípios de 'família' e a moralidade aspirada pelo imperador Augusto. Os ensinamentos apresentados no livro são uma forma hilária, de mostrar as inseguranças, dúvidas e anseios de como agir para conquistar a mulher amada. A obra promete deliciar o eleitora ao mostrar como era a arte da sedução há dois mil anos atrás, bem como surpreendê-lo com as enormes semelhanças nos dias de hoje.

A Arte De Amar

by Ovídio

Property Description
ISBN: 9786587921679
Publisher: Lebooks Editora
Release Date: October of 2020
Language: Brazilian Portuguese
Pages: 102
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility:
Categories: eBooks in Portuguese > History > Ancient history
eBooks in Portuguese > Fiction > Poetry
EAN: 9786587921679
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ovídio

Publius Ovidius Naso was born in Sulmo, present-day Sulmona, on March 20, 43 BC. He quickly entered the literary circles of Rome and became close to the best poets of the time. Thus began his journey into love and erotic poetry, which would lead him, successively, to compose the Heroides, the Art of Love, the Remedies Against Love, and the Treatments for the Beauty of Women. In the midst of such great success, and when nothing foreshadowed it, a harsh blow of fortune struck him, sudden and unexpected: Augustus, in 8 BC, expelled him from Rome and condemned him to exile in Tomis, on the borders of the Empire, in present-day Romania. And, already in Tomis, he composed letters addressed to his wife, friends, and family who remained in Rome. He organized them into two collections: the Tristes, first, or perhaps, in a more faithful translation, Songs of Sorrow, and later, the Letters from Pontus. Both abound with poems of lament, of sadness, a sickly and monotonous song of one who feels inspiration fleeing him for anything other than the celebration of his own pain. The aesthetic quality of these poems has divided scholars; be that as it may, however, the truth is that, with these collections, Ovid inaugurated a new modality of poetry, which we could, without exaggeration, call the "poetics of exile".

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