Playing Hard to Get: Limerence and the Psychology of the Amator in Latin Love Elegy

Location

Roy O. West Library 119 (Roy Instruction Classroom)

Event Website

https://depauw.campuslabs.com/engage/event/12454496

Start Date

7-5-2026 3:15 PM

End Date

7-5-2026 3:30 PM

Presentation Type

Thesis

Description

This thesis seeks to further bridge the gap in the literature between the fields of psychology and Latin literature. Specifically, it examines Latin love elegy through modern psychological frameworks of limerence. Limerence is a descriptive psychological condition in which an individual experiences an involuntary, often uncontrollable obsessive attachment to another person known as the limerent object. Drawing from the works of Ovid, Propertius, Tibullus, and Catullus, the thesis argues that the elegiac amator consistently parallels the cognitive and emotional patterns associated with limerence, including idealization, uncontrollable ruminative thinking, emotional volatility, and fixation on reciprocated attention. Using Verhulst’s five stage model and Wakin and Vo’s IDR model of limerence, this literary analysis maps the amator’s experience onto identifiable psychological stages of limerence.

Comments

Project Advisor: David Guinee

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May 7th, 3:15 PM May 7th, 3:30 PM

Playing Hard to Get: Limerence and the Psychology of the Amator in Latin Love Elegy

Roy O. West Library 119 (Roy Instruction Classroom)

This thesis seeks to further bridge the gap in the literature between the fields of psychology and Latin literature. Specifically, it examines Latin love elegy through modern psychological frameworks of limerence. Limerence is a descriptive psychological condition in which an individual experiences an involuntary, often uncontrollable obsessive attachment to another person known as the limerent object. Drawing from the works of Ovid, Propertius, Tibullus, and Catullus, the thesis argues that the elegiac amator consistently parallels the cognitive and emotional patterns associated with limerence, including idealization, uncontrollable ruminative thinking, emotional volatility, and fixation on reciprocated attention. Using Verhulst’s five stage model and Wakin and Vo’s IDR model of limerence, this literary analysis maps the amator’s experience onto identifiable psychological stages of limerence.

https://scholarship.depauw.edu/library_symposium/2025-2026/Spring2026/19