What are the views and attitudes towards love as presented by Ovid compared to other first century Roman poets?
Love has in modern times, until relatively recently been inextricably linked with marriage and young people have been encouraged not to indulge in sex before marriage. However during first century Rome this was not necessarily the case. Attitudes to love, sex and marriage varied according to age, wealth, status in society and respectability. In one of Plautus' comedies, a young and respectable man stands outside a brothel when his slave gives him the following advice:
" From this place, no one bars you; no one stops you buying what is openly for sale. Provided that you keep off married women, widows, young men and women and boys of free birth, make love at will".
This was the attitude of society at the time. Cicero states "A young man should be allowed his flings with the 'non pure' and the 'non virtuous'."
The 'non pure' which Cicero refers to here would be professional prostitutes, slaves or slave girls. It was of course only a man's sexual desires that were considered; a lady's sexuality rated no comment.
This leads to the unsurprising fact that upper class Roman marriages were rarely conducted out of love. Love was severely hindered within marriage, mostly due to the level of modesty expected of a lady and her husband's conduct towards her. Cato proudly announces that he 'never embraces his wife unless it thunders loudly'. It was not unusual for marriage not to be an institution of loving happiness. A woman's role in marriage was to be affectionate, supportive but most importantly to provide children. This was only followed in importance to organising the household slaves and raising female children to do the same jobs as their mother.
Ignores literariness, too much biography, though useful background.
You don't need to give a little bit of history every time you introduce an author! Although useful background your essay misses the point that Ovid was writing literature to be read by others, Corinna was probably fictional, and whilst Ovid may have indulged in affairs, his adultery in literature is about being subversive to Augustus and in terms of genre. Catullus, moreover, did not necessarily crave fidelity, apart from the fact that Lesbia was probably also fictional, his request for her to give up other lovers is a plea to get her in to bed, since he himself is 'unfaithful', other poems are addressed to other women including Ipstilla.
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