An Imaginary Life

by

David Malouf

Themes and Colors
Suffering and Personal Growth Theme Icon
Language, Perception, and Nature Theme Icon
Frivolity vs. Practicality Theme Icon
Childhood, Fate, and Identity Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in An Imaginary Life, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Suffering and Personal Growth

David Malouf’s An Imaginary Life gives a fictional account of the Roman poet Ovid—a historical figure notorious for being the Roman Empire’s most irreverent public personality—after he is exiled for his indecent poems. Though most of the details of the real-life Ovid’s exile are lost to history, Malouf imagines what may have become of the infamous, hedonistic poet in his last years. In Malouf’s story, Ovid is exiled to the tiny village of Tomis…

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Language, Perception, and Nature

When the Roman Emperor Augustus exiles the poet Ovid to a small remote village called Tomis, Ovid must learn to speak an entirely new language. Although Ovid initially finds the villagers to be barbaric and strange, as he slowly absorbs their language he begins to understand how they see the world, which contrasts drastically with his own worldview. After learning the village language, Ovid again learns a new “language” when he meets the Child

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Frivolity vs. Practicality

Before his exile, Ovid is a “metropolitan poet,” a public figure and agitator who spurns Rome’s culture of duty and nationalism. His life is carefree, colorful, and devoid of any responsibility. After Ovid is exiled to Tomis beyond the edges of Roman society, he finds that his formerly frivolous lifestyle leaves him utterly inept to live and operate in such a harsh environment. At the same time, Ovid recognizes that the villagers in Tomis err…

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Childhood, Fate, and Identity

Although the Roman Ovid is known as a sophisticated, “metropolitan poet,” he spends his childhood on a rural farm, living a simple, happy life surrounded by nature. After his irreverent poems earn the ire of the Roman emperor, the government exiles Ovid to the remote village of Tomis, which resembles his childhood home in that it is simple, quiet, and surrounded by nature. As the years in exile pass, Ovid recalls his early years…

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