Summary: | The story of Pyramus and Thisbe narrated by Ovid in his Metamorphoses has given rise to a significant number of stories regarding the two lovers in French Medieval Literature. In this essay, we observe the French constellation of the Ovidian story focusing on a treatment that a fundamental element of the universe of Ovidian fiction has shown: its oscillation between identifying and differentiating the two lovers. In the French medieval versions, it may be observed a marked trend to individualize the feminine character and to give him more relief; although this does not always happen in such a way. Actually, a similar tension is observed in the moral and allegorical interpretations. Therefore, each author has extended the constellation of Pyramus and Thisbe in their own way, developing a universe of fiction stressed by the identification and individualization.
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