Silenced Voices is a pointed examination of the loss of speech, exile from community, and memory throughout the literary corpus of the Roman poet Ovid.
In his book-length poem Metamorphoses , characters are transformed in ways that include losing their power of human speech.
In Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto , poems written after Ovid's exile from Rome in 8 ce, he represents himself as also having been transformed, losing his voice.
Bartolo A.
Natoli provides a uni.