Revisiting Rape in Antiquity

Revisiting Rape in Antiquity portes grátis

Revisiting Rape in Antiquity

Sexualised Violence in Greek and Roman Worlds

Magalhaes, Jose Malheiro; Deacy, Professor Susan; Menzies, Jean Zacharski

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

06/2023

304

Dura

Inglês

9781350099203

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Lists of Plates, Figures, Maps and Tables
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements

Introduction: 'Twenty Years Ago': Revisiting Rape in Antiquity
Susan Deacy (University of Roehampton, UK)

Part 1: Why are we still Reading Rapes?

1. Sympathy for the Victims of Sexual Violence in Greek society and Literature
Edward M. Harris (Durham, University, UK)

2. Why are we Still Reading Ovid's rapes?
Holly Ranger (Institute of Classical Studies University of London, UK)

3. Women who Punish Other Women: Rape and Infidelity in Retellings for Children of the Greek myth of Io and Hera
Robin Diver (University of Birmingham, UK)

Part 2: Victims and survivors

4. The Rape of Boys in Ancient Athens
Jose Malheiro Magalhaes (University of Roehampton, UK)

5. The Rape of Chrysippus
Nuno Simoes Rodrigues (University of Lisbon, Portugal)

6. Shame on whom? Changing Clerical Views on Raped Women in Late Antiquity
Ulriika Vihervalli (University of Liverpool, UK)

Part 3: Critiquing 'A series of Erotic Pursuits'

7. 'Simulated' Pursuit Scenes on Red-Figure Pottery: An Iconographic Re-Contextualization
Marco Serino (University of Turin, Italy)

8. Changing Fashions in the Visual Depiction of Sexual Pursuit in Classical Athens
Robin Osborne (University of Cambridge, UK)

9. Fifty Shades of Rape: Erotic Pursuit and Abduction in Athenian Vase-Painting
Viktoria Raeuchle (University of Vienna, Austria)

Part 4: Constructing Rape and Sexual(ised) Violence

10. Revisiting the Vulnerability of Athena: Rape, Sexual Conflict and the 'Myth Instinct'
Susan Deacy (University of Roehampton, UK)

11. Sexual Violence in the Female Martyrdoms of the Sixth-Century Byzantine East: Febronia and Mahya
Elisa Groff (University of Exeter, UK)

12. Sororophobia in Ovid
Melissa Marturano (The City University of New York, USA)

Part 5: Coded Rapes: Now and Then

13. Why Centaurs do not Rape Anymore? Looking for Sexual violence in Contemporary Children's and Young Adult Culture Inspired by Classical Antiquity
Ana Mik (University of Warsaw, Poland)

14. Sex, Violence and Graphics: Illustrating Helen
Karen F. Pierce (University of Cardiff, UK)

15. Warfare, Violence, Rape, Revenge: Jane Holland's Boudicca & co
Marguerite Johnson (University of Newcastle, Australia)

16. Rape and Rhetoric during the Athenian Democracy
Jean Zacharski Menzies (University of Roehampton, UK)

Notes
Bibliography
Index
sexual violence; art; philosophy; drama; ancient literature; epic; ancient; postclassical; women; mythology