Bodily Fluids in Antiquity

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From ancient Egypt to Imperial Rome, from Greek medicine to early Christianity, this volume examines how human bodily fluids influenced ideas about gender, sexuality, politics, emotions, and morality, and how those ideas shaped later European thought.

Comprising 24 chapters across seven key themes―language, gender, eroticism, nutrition, dissolution, death, and afterlife―this volume investigates bodily fluids in the context of the current sensory turn. It asks fundamental questions about physicality and fluidity: how were bodily fluids categorised and differentiated? How were fluids trapped inside the body perceived, and how did this perception alter when those fluids were externalised? Do ancient approaches complement or challenge our modern sensibilities about bodily fluids? How were religious practices influenced by attitudes towards bodily fluids, and how did religious authorities attempt to regulate or restrict their appearance? Why were some fluids taboo, and others cherished? In what ways were bodily fluids gendered? Offering a range of scholarly approaches and voices, this volume explores how ideas about the body and the fluids it contained and externalised are culturally conditioned and ideologically determined. The analysis encompasses the key geographic centres of the ancient Mediterranean basin, including Greece, Rome, Byzantium, and Egypt. By taking a longue durée perspective across a richly intertwined set of territories, this collection is the first to provide a comprehensive, wide-ranging study of bodily fluids in the ancient world.

Bodily Fluids in Antiquity will be of particular interest to academic readers working in the fields of classics and its reception, archaeology, anthropology, and ancient to Early Modern history. It will also appeal to more general readers with an interest in the history of the body and history of medicine.

Author(s): Mark Bradley, Victoria Leonard, Laurence Totelin
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 452
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
List of figures
List of tables
Acknowledgements
List of contributors
Introduction
Part I The language of fluidity
1 Fluid vocabulary: flux in the lexicon of bodily emissions
Part II A woman in flux
2 A valid excuse for a day off work: menstruation in an ancient Egyptian village
3 Uterine bleeding, knowledge, and emotion in ancient Greek medical and magical representations
4 Puellae gently glow: scent, sweat, and the real in Latin love elegy and Ovid’s didactic works
5 Overflowing bodies and a Pandora of ivory: the pure humours of an erotic surrogate
Part III Erotic and generative fluids
6 The eyes have it: from generative fluids to vision rays
7 ‘Infertile’ and ‘sub-fertile’ semen in the Hippocratic Corpus and the biological works of Aristotle
8 Say it with fluids: what the body exudes and retains when Juvenal’s couple relationships go awry
9 Flabby flesh and foetal formation: body fluidity and foetal sex differentiation in ancient Greek medicine
10 One-seed, two-seed, three-seed? Reassessing the fluid economy of ancient generation
11 Phalli fighting with fluids: approaching images of ejaculating phalli in the Roman world
Part IV Nutritive and healthy fluids
12 A natural symbol? The (un)importance of blood in early Greek literary and religious contexts
13 Taste and the senses: Galen’s humours clarified
14 Breastmilk, breastfeeding, and the female body in early Imperial Rome
15 Breastmilk in the cave and on the arena: early Christian stories of lactation in context
Part V Dissolving and liquefying bodies
16 Tears and the leaky vessel: permeable and fluid bodies in Ovid and Lucretius
17 Seneca’s corpus: a sympathy of fluids and fluctuations
18 Bodily fluids, grotesque imagery, and poetics in Persius’ Satires
Part VI Wounded and putrefying bodies
19 ‘Efflux is my manifestation’: positive conceptions of putrefactive fluids in the ancient Egyptian coffin texts
20 The physiology of matricide: revenge and metabolism imagery in Aeschylus’ Oresteia
21 Open wounds, liquid bodies, and melting selves in early Imperial Latin literature
Part VII Ancient fluids: afterlife and reception
22 The reception of classical constructions of blood in Medieval and Early Modern martyrologies
23 ‘Expelling the purple tyrant from the citadel’: the menstruation debate in book 2 of Abraham Cowley’s Plantarum Libri Sex (1662)
24 Opening the body of fluids: taking in and pouring out in Renaissance readings of classical women
Envoi
Index