Changing Bodies, Changing Meanings: Studies on the Human Body in Antiquity

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Changing Bodies, Changing Meanings gathers together expertise in archaeology, classical literature, patristics and the cultural reception of antiquity to present a fully-rounded picture of the cultural status of the human body in the ancient world. The essays examine how the different ways in which the body altered could be a means of conveying ideologies and of experiencing the self. Traditions discussed include classical Greece, Augustan Rome, New Kingdom Egypt and the world of late antiquity. This book is the first to place at its centre the emotional and experiential aspect of the body in antiquity. The interdisciplinary interests of the contributors, the application of current theoretical perspectives and the utilization of many sources never before translated into a modern language, make this work a unique contribution to a growing field of inquiry. Angus Bowie, Queen's College, Oxford, Gillian Clark, University of Liverpool, Richard Hawley, Royal Holloway, University of London, Lynn Meskell, Cambridge University,

Author(s): Dominic Montserrat
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 1997

Language: English
Pages: 256

Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Contents......Page 5
List of plates......Page 10
List of figures......Page 11
Notes on contributors......Page 12
Acknowledgements......Page 14
List of abbreviations......Page 16
INTRODUCTION......Page 18
DISABLING BODIES......Page 30
THE DYNAMICS OF BEAUTY IN CLASSICAL GREECE......Page 54
EXUVIAS EFFIGIEMQUE: DIDO, AENEAS AND THE BODY AS SIGN......Page 74
BODIES IN FLUX: OVID'S METAMORPHOSES......Page 97
BODIES AND BLOOD: LATE ANTIQUE DEBATE ON MARTYRDOM, VIRGINITY AND RESURRECTION......Page 116
READING THE DISJOINTED BODY IN COPTIC: FROM PHYSICAL MODIFICATION TO TEXTUAL FRAGMENTATION......Page 133
THE IRRESISTIBLE BODY AND THE SEDUCTION OF ARCHAEOLOGY......Page 156
UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS: MUMMIES AND THE EROTICS OF BIOGRAPHY......Page 179
NACKTLEBEN......Page 215
Bibliography......Page 230
General index......Page 244
Index of ancient sources......Page 248