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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/32544
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dc.contributor.advisorDr. Lamond, Emily-
dc.contributor.authorCobbett, Jordan-
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-17T17:06:10Z-
dc.date.available2025-10-17T17:06:10Z-
dc.date.issued2025-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/32544-
dc.descriptionMcMaster University MASTER OF ARTS (2025) Hamilton, Ontario (Classics) TITLE: Seneca’s Medea as Reception of Ovid: The Characterization of Medea as Magician, Criminal, and Collector of Magical Materials AUTHOR: Jordan Cobbett, B.A. (Hons) (McMaster University) SUPERVISOR: Professor Emily Lamond NUMBER OF PAGES: xi, 107en_US
dc.description.abstractIn this thesis, I investigate Seneca’s reception of Ovid’s Medea of the Heroides 6 and Metamorphoses 7 in his tragedy Medea. While there has been significant attention given to Ovid’s description of Medea of the Metamorphoses and her use of magic, there has been little comprehensive examination of the ways that Ovid, and in turn, Seneca, characterize and comment on magical practice through the portrayals of their respective Medeae. I compare the various details surrounding Medea’s use of magic presented by both authors, which includes Medea’s ritual practice as a magician, her actions as a criminal, and her engagement with landscape where magic dwells. I explore Medea’s characterization as a magician by comparing the way in which Ovid describes Medea’s reason for using greater magic, her relationship with the gods, and the outcome of her greater magical endeavour in juxtaposition to Seneca’s Medea. The criminality of Medea is portrayed variously by Ovid in his Heroides 6 and Metamorphoses 7 wherein the former emphasizes Medea’s criminality and the latter arguably complicates an easy assessment of Medea’s actions as simply villainous. I examine Seneca’s selective adoptions and inversions of these portrayals of Medea. I also highlight Medea’s role for both authors as collector of magical materials, a theme which includes an appraisal of what makes a landscape magical, the importance of boundaries, and the fallout of traversing them, in Seneca’s view. By comparing the characterization of Ovidian and Senecan Medeae as magician, criminal, and collector by these authors, I identify the themes through which Ovid and Seneca provide the most commentary on the practice of magic.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectMagic, Medea, Ovid, Seneca, reception, Roman societyen_US
dc.titleSeneca's Medea as Reception of Ovid: The Characterization of Medea as Magician, Criminal, and Collector of Magical Materialsen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
dc.contributor.departmentClassicsen_US
dc.description.degreetypeThesisen_US
dc.description.degreeMaster of Arts (MA)en_US
dc.description.layabstractLay Abstract This thesis explores and compares Seneca’s characterization of Medea as a magic practitioner in his Medea to that of Ovid’s Heroides 6 and Metamorphoses 7. I track Seneca’s consistencies with and deviations from Ovid’s tradition concerning the characterization of Medea’s use of magic. Chapter One, on Medea as magician, compares the ways that Ovid’s Medea of the Metamorphoses 7 differs from the characterizations of Seneca’s Medea in respect of her use of magic. Chapter Two follows the presentation of Medea’s actions in Ovid’s Heroides 6 and Metamorphoses 7 in juxtaposition to those in Seneca’s Medea and consider how they are variously depicted as nefas and/or scelera. Chapter Three explores and compares the differing ways in which Ovidian and Senecan Medeae engage with magical landscapes. Comparing characterizations of Medea as magician, criminal, and collector by these authors, I identify the themes through which Ovid and Seneca provide commentary on magical practice.en_US
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