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E-grāmata: Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World

3.76/5 (18 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by , Edited by (Open University, UK), Edited by (Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand)
  • Formāts: 588 pages
  • Sērija : Rewriting Antiquity
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Feb-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317602767
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 48,83 €*
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  • Formāts: 588 pages
  • Sērija : Rewriting Antiquity
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Feb-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317602767

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Looking at sex and sexuality from a variety of historical, sociological and theoretical perspectives, as represented in a variety of media, Sex in Antiquity represents a vibrant picture of the discipline of ancient gender and sexuality studies, showcasing the work of leading international scholars as well as that of emerging talents and new voices.

Sexuality and gender in the ancient world is an area of research that has grown quickly with often sudden shifts in focus and theoretical standpoints. This volume contextualises these shifts while putting in place new ideas and avenues of exploration that further develop this lively field or set of disciplines. This broad study also includes studies of gender and sexuality in the Ancient Near East which not only provide rich consideration of those areas but also provide a comparative perspective not often found in such collections. Sex in Antiquity is a major contribution to the field of ancient gender and sexuality studies.

Recenzijas

"A bold and far-reaching collection of articles from some of the most perceptive and influential scholars in the field. This volume embraces the recent re-examination of gender as a critical category of meaning when thinking about sexual behaviors and the culturally produced meanings of sex; as such this book should significantly broaden the field of inquiry concerning ancient sexuality, while sharpening the theoretical positions that inform current debates."

Kirk Ormand, Oberlin College, USA

"Sex in Antiquity appears at a timely moment. This monumental collection of original essays marks the close of a retrospective period and the emergence of exciting new lines of enquiry. It makes two decisive contributions: first, by broadening the established range of the field to include work on the Near Eastern and Judaic sex/gender systems; second, by questioning supposedly settled conclusions on numerous topics, including female desire, impotence, male passivity, pederastic relations, prostitution, queerness, and rape. Its publication will undoubtedly create a second wave of enthusiasm for studying ancient gender and sexuality."

Marilyn B. Skinner, University of Arizona, USA

"[ T]he editors of and contributors to this volume offer insightful and sometimes unexpected conversations that take place between current and past scholarship, and provide opportunities to explore the trajectories that scholarship on sex, sexuality, and gender in antiquity might now take... Overall, [ the volume] offers thoughtful reflections on how current scholarship on gender and sexuality in antiquity got to where it is today and provides new avenues of inquiry."

F. Mira Green, University of Washington, USA, Bryn Mawr Classical Review

"This volume is absolutely superb: from cover to cover, 30 chapters and an introduction, it is a tour de force ... The contributions are informative, insightful, articulate and well researched ... the book is an impressive and important work and a necessary read for scholars of the ancient world and sexuality studies."

Darlene M. Juschka, University of Regina, Canada, The Classical Review

"The broad range of chapters investigates important historical and societal issues in ancient Near East, the Greek world, and the Roman world, such as prostitution, assault, rape and war, and pederasty. We also learn about a bizarre range of subjects such as debatable cases of reproductive magic in the Hebrew Bible; the use of flour in Mesopotamian midwifery; the language of unmanliness in Latin; the Christian martyr Perpetua, and much much more."

Lucia Marchini, Minerva November/December 2018

List of illustrations
xi
Acknowledgements xiii
List of abbreviations
xiv
Notes on contributors xvi
Introduction 1(12)
Mark Masterson
Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz
James Robson
Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones
PART I Ancient Near East
13(84)
1 "I have hired you with my son's mandrakes": Women's reproductive magic in ancient Israel
15(15)
Susan Ackerman
2 Fertility and gender in the Ancient Near East
30(20)
Stephanie Lynn Budin
3 Guarding the house: Conflict, rape, and David's concubines
50(17)
Elna K. Solvang
4 From horse kissing to beastly emissions: Paraphilias in the Ancient Near East
67(13)
Roland Boer
5 Too young -- too old? Sex and age in Mesopotamian literature
80(17)
Gwendolyn Leick
PART II Archaic, classical and Hellenistic Greece
97(236)
6 Fantasy and the homosexual orgy: Unearthing the sexual scripts of ancient Athens
99(16)
Alastair Blanshard
7 Was pederasty problematized? A diachronic view
115(22)
Andrew Lear
8 Before queerness? Visions of a homoerotic heaven in ancient Greco-Italic tomb paintings
137(20)
Walter Duvall Penrose Jr.
9 "Sex ed" at the archaic symposium: Prostitutes, boys and paideia
157(22)
Allison Glazebrook
10 Is there a history of prostitution?
179(19)
Simon Goldhill
11 Relations of sex and gender in Greek melic poetry: Helen, object and subject of desire
198(16)
Claude Calame
12 Melancholy becomes Electra
214(17)
Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz
13 Of love and bondage in Euripides' Hippolytus
231(14)
Monica S. Cyrino
14 Dog-love-dog: Kynogamia and Cynic sexual ethics
245(15)
Dorota Dutsch
15 Naming names, telling tales: Sexual secrets and Greek narrative
260(18)
Sheila Murnaghan
16 Ancient warfare and the ravaging martial rape of girls and women: Evidence from Homeric epic and Greek drama
278(20)
Kathy L. Gaca
17 "Yes" and "no" in women's desire
298(17)
Edward M. Harris
18 Fantastic sex: Fantasies of sexual assault in Aristophanes
315(18)
James Robson
PART III Republican, imperial and late-ancient Rome
333(219)
19 The bisexuality of Orpheus
335(17)
Matthew Fox
20 Reading boy-love and child-love in the Greco-Roman world
352(22)
Amy Richlin
21 What is named by the name "Philaenis"? Gender, function, and authority of an antonomastic figure
374(19)
Sandra Boehringer
22 Curiositas, horror, and the monstrous-feminine in Apuleius' Metamorphoses
393(15)
Hunter H. Gardner
23 Making manhood hard: Tiberius and Latin literary representations of erectile dysfunction
408(14)
Judith P. Hallett
24 Toga and pallium: Status, sexuality, identity
422(27)
Kelly Olson
25 Revisiting Roman sexuality: Agency and the conceptualization of penetrated males
449(12)
Deborah Kamen
Sarah Levin-Richardson
26 The language of gender: Lexical semantics and the Latin vocabulary of unmanly men
461(21)
Craig Williams
21 Remaking Perpetua: A female martyr reconstructed
482(18)
Barbara K. Gold
28 Agathias and Paul the Silentiary: Erotic epigram and the sublimation of same-sex desire in the age of Justinian
500(17)
Steven D. Smith
29 Friends without benefits: Or, academic love
517(19)
Daniel Boyarin
30 Toward a late-ancient physiognomy
536(16)
Mark Masterson
Index 552
Mark Masterson is Senior Lecturer of Classics at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. He is author of Man to Man: Desire, Homosociality, and Authority in Late-Roman Manhood (2014). He has published articles and book chapters on Statius, Vitruvius, the Historia Monachorum, Eugene ONeill, Emperor Julian, St. Augustine and current New Zealand health policy, and the state of masculinity studies in Classics. He is currently completing a monograph on same-sex desire between Byzantine men, entitled Between Byzantine Men: Desire, Brotherhood, and Male Culture in the Medieval Empire.

Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz is Professor of Comparative Literature at Hamilton College, USA. Author of Anxiety Veiled: Euripides and the Traffic in Women (1993) and Greek Tragedy (2008), she has co-edited Vision and Viewing in Ancient Greece, with Sue Blundell and Douglas Cairns (2013), Feminist Theory and the Classics, with Amy Richlin (Routledge, 1993), Among Women: From the Homosocial to the Homoerotic in the Ancient World, with Lisa Auanger (2002), as well as From Abortion to Pederasty: Addressing Difficult Topics in the Classics Classroom, with Fiona McHardy (2014), which won the Teaching Literature Book Award 2015. She is one of the co-editors and translators of Women on the Edge: Four Plays by Euripides (1999).

James Robson is Senior Lecturer in Classical Studies at the Open University, UK. His previous publications include Humour, Obscenity and Aristophanes (2006); Aristophanes: An Introduction (shortlisted for the Anglo-Hellenic Leagues Runciman Award, 2009); Ctesias History of Persia: Tales of the Orient (with Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones; 2010) and Sex and Sexuality in Classical Athens (2013).