This is a study of how sex and sexuality are written about in the first centuries of this era, a central period in the history of sexuality. Writing with the same wit and verve as the ancient writers with whom he engages, Simon Goldhill shows how the standard accounts of sexuality in this period are distorted by ignoring the sexy, ironic and often bizarre texts of ancient novels, erotic poetry and humorous dialogues.
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"An important and accessible work. Recommended for graduate and undergraduates." Religious Studies Review
The sexy, witty and often bizarre novels, poetry and dialogues of the first centuries of this era (works such as Longus' Daphnis and Chloe, Achilles Tatius' Leukippe and Cleitophon and Plutarch's Amatorius) were being composed at the same time as fundamental ideas about the body, gender and sexuality were being set in place with the rise of Christianity and the Church to dominate the pagan world. Modern writers on the history of sexuality have largely ignored this literature in favour of prose treatises, philosophy and Christian homilies. Simon Goldhill, writing with the same wit and verve as the ancient writers with whom he engages, sets out to put these texts back into the history of sexuality. The result is a dazzling celebration of sex and sexuality in the Greek literature of the first centuries CE.
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Librería: Ancient World Books, Toronto, ON, Canada
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good+. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Very Good+. Pages tanned. DJ spine a bit sunned. ; The W. B. Stanford Memorial Lectures; 5.75 X 1 X 9 inches; 208 pages. Nº de ref. del artículo: 37086
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