The Aeneid And Metamorphoses And Their Influence In The

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The Depiction of Women in The Aeneid and Metamorphoses and Their Influence in the Roman Empire Maya Sissel, words. In The Aeneid, by Virgil, Virgil depicts a wide variety of female characters that interact with Aeneas in different ways. In addition, Metamorphoses, by Ovid, also illustrates a group of female characters that interact with the divine. Both of these texts provide depictions and illustrations of women in the Roman Empire. However, the treatment of female characters in the two texts by Virgil and Ovid reveals a difference in how the two authors viewed ideas of women during the Roman Empire. Virgil’s depiction of female characters in The Aeneid is different compared to Ovid’s treatment of female characters in the Metamorphoses. Virgil depicts his female characters as strong, independent, and …show more content…

Ultimately, Ovid’s depiction of women as objects exhibits the idea that Roman women have no influence or power, while Virgil’s depiction demonstrates that women can have a small amount of influence on the Roman Empire, but the effects vary. Although Virgil tends to depict his female characters in a more positive light and Ovid tends to depict them in a more negative light, one might object that Ovid also depicts his female characters in a positive light. In Metamorphoses, Medea prays to the gods to help her make a potion to renew Jason’s father’s youth. As Medea is praying, she explains how she can “calm rough seas, and stir the calm by my magic spells: bring clouds, disperse the clouds, raise storms and storms dispel; and, with my incantations, I break the serpent’s teeth;.and move the forests, and command the mountain tops to shake, earth to groan, and from their tombs the sleeping dead to wake” (Metamorphoses, 24). Ovid illustrates how Medea has her own power that is different from the power of men. Unlike Daphne, Medea is able to solve her own

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