Nature Embodied: Gesture in Ancient Rome

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Bodily gesture. A Roman worshipper spins in a circle in front of a temple. Faced with death, a Roman woman tears her hair and beats her breasts. Enthusiastic spectators at a gladiatorial event gesticulate with thumbs. Examining the tantalizing glimpses of ancient bodies offered by surviving Roman sculptures, paintings, and literary texts, Anthony Corbeill analyzes the role of gesture in medical and religious ritual, in the gladiatorial arena, in mourning practice, in aristocratic competition of the late Republic, and in the court of the emperor Tiberius. Adopting approaches from anthropology, gender studies, and ecological theory, Nature Embodied offers both a series of case studies and an overarching narrative of the role and meanings of gesture in ancient Rome. Arguing that bodily movement grew out of the relationship between Romans and their natural, social, and spiritual environment, the book explores the ways in which an originally harmonious relationship between nature and the body was manipulated as Rome became socially and politically complex. By the time that Tacitus was writing about the reign of Tiberius, the emergence of a new political order had prompted an increasingly inscrutable equation between truth and the body--and something vital in the once harmonizing relationship between bodies and the world beyond them had been lost. Nature Embodied makes an important contribution to an expanding field of research by offering a new theoretical model for the study of gesture in classical times.

Author(s): Anthony Corbeill
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Year: 2004

Language: English
Pages: xiv, 202
City: Princeton

ILLUSTRATIONS ix
ABBREVIATIONS xi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiii
Introduction. GESTURE AS A CULTURAL SYSTEM 1
Chapter 1. PARTICIPATORY GESTURES IN ROMAN RELIGIOUS RITUAL AND MEDICINE 12
Chapter 2. THE POWER OF THUMBS 41
Chapter 3. BLOOD, MILK, AND TEARS: THE GESTURES OF MOURNING WOMEN 67
Chapter 4. POLITICAL MOVEMENT: WALKING AND IDEOLOGY I N REPUBLICAN ROME 107
Chapter 5. FACE FACTS: FACIAL EXPRESSION A N D THE NEW POLITICAL ORDER IN TACITUS 140
BIBLIOGRAPHY 169
INDEX LOCORUM 187
GENERAL INDEX 198