Combining impeccable scholarship with accessible, straightforward prose, Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece argues that institutionalized pederasty began after 650 B.C., far later than previous authors have thought, and was initiated as a means of stemming overpopulation in the upper class. William Armstrong Percy III maintains that Cretan sages established a system under which a young warrior in his early twenties took a teenager of his own aristocratic background as a beloved until the age of thirty, when service to the state required the older partner to marry. The practice spread with significant variants to other Greek-speaking areas. In some places it emphasized development of the athletic, warrior individual, while in others both intellectual and civic achievement were its goals. In Athens it became a vehicle of cultural transmission, so that the best of each older cohort selected, loved, and trained the best of the younger. Pederasty was from the beginning both physical and emotional, the highest and most intense type of male bonding. These pederastic bonds, Percy believes, were responsible for the rise of Hellas and the "Greek miracle": in two centuries the population of Attica, a mere 45,000 adult males in six generations, produced an astounding number of great men who laid the enduring foundations of Western thought and civilization.
Author(s): William Armstrong Percy III
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Year: 1996
Language: English
Pages: 260
Tags: Male Homosexuality, Pederasty, Ancient Greece, History, Homosexuality and literature, Homosexuality, Institutionalized Pederasty, Greek Pederasty, Boys, Indo-European Pederasty, Gymnasia, Symposia, Pederastic Art
Introduction i
Part One: Greece before the Institutionalization of Pederasty
1. Indo-European Pederasty 15
2. Dorian Knabenliebe 27
3. Pre-Pederastic Immortals 36
4. Situational Homosexuality and Demography 42
Part Two: The Institutionalization of Pederasty
5. The Immortals Become Pederasts 53
6. Cretan Knights and "Renowned Ones" 59
7. Spartan Hoplite "Inspirers" and Their "Listeners" 73
Part Three: Diffusion
8. Gymnasia, Symposia, and Pederastic Art 95
9. The Mainland: Athletes and Heroes 122
10. Amorous Aeolia 142
11. Insouciant Ionia 149
12. Outre Tyrants and Eccentric Philosophers in the Archaic West 162
13. Archaic Athens 171
Epilogue 185
Notes 193
Bibliography 217
Index 247
Illustrations follow page 98