The aim of this study is to explore how the tales in Metamorphoses reflect psychological desires that resonate with contemporary motivations for altering one’s appearance. From Ovid’s Metamorphoses , 6 stories of beautiful males and females were collected: Narcissus, Echo, Apollo and Daphne, Venus and Adonis, Persephone, and Pygmalion. They were analyzed through Fromm’s framework of human needs and from the perspective of plastic surgery. Physical beauty often drives the narrative but is linked to deeper desires such as love, identity, and transcendence. Metamorphosis typically involves a trade-off; fulfilling one need often results in the loss of another (e.g., identity for rootedness, relatedness for freedom). The interactions between gods and mortals highlight the universality of these needs, transcending even divine status. Beauty often drove relatedness but could also lead to isolation. Transformation typically addressed inner or external conflicts, symbolizing transcendence, although it was not always voluntary or positive. These narratives offer timeless insights into the human condition, with beauty and transformation acting as metaphors for existential challenges. These stories reflect the enduring human desires for connection, transformation, freedom, and self-realization. Plastic surgery, as modern “metamorphosis,” serves as a tool to address these needs, enabling individuals to navigate personal and societal pressures. However, the cautionary elements in Ovid’s tales as Narcissus’s self-obsession or Echo’s loss of voice warn against over-reliance on external transformation for internal fulfillment. This comparison has deepened our understanding, fostered empathy, and encouraged a nuanced view of plastic surgery as a cultural and psychological phenomenon intertwined with timeless human narratives.
Kun Hwang (Fri,) studied this question.