The Roman Gaze: Vision, Power, and the BodyDavid Fredrick JHU Press, 18.11.2002 - 334 Seiten The Roman Gaze: Vision, Power, and the Body uses the concept of "the gaze" to examine literary, visual, and material evidence that reveals the contribution of ancient Rome to the development of Western culture. Contributors draw upon a wide range of theoretical methods, using visual and body theory from various fields and period specializations. Topics include violence and gender in Senecan theater, literary representations of erotic love within a hierarchical and violent Rome, and the differing appeal of artistic depictions designed for visual consumption by both genders. Boldly interdisciplinary, The Roman Gaze will interest readers in history, classics, literature, art, and cinema. Contributors: Carlin Barton, Cindy Benton, John R. Clarke, Anthony Corbeill, Katherine Owen Eldred, David Fredrick, Pamela Gordon, Zahra Newby, and Alison R. Sharrock. |
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... call it " the Greek sexuality wars , " because Rome has been per- sistently edited out by both sides . According to Foucauldian work , welcomed by constructionist historians in other fields , the ancient world can only lend support to ...
... call attention to such con- tradictions by making Rome , rather than Greece , the test case for the question of difference . The contributors do not agree on the degree of Rome's difference from ourselves or on which theory of the gaze ...
... call forth the panoptic gaze of control long before early modernism ? The devil is in the date . The arbitrariness of limiting film theory's gaze to the fifteenth century and after because of Foucault's periodiza- tion exposes the ...
... calls attention to the gait of his adversaries - not as an idle stereotype but because his audience paid close attention to it ( as they did to Cicero's own walk ) as a reflection of general political orientation , if not attitudes ...
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Inhalt
Split Vision The Politics of the Gaze in Senecas Troades | 31 |
This Ship of Fools Epic Vision in Lucans Vulteius Ep | 57 |
Some Unseen Monster Rereading Lucretius on Sex | 86 |
Reading Programs in GrecoRoman Art Reflections on the Spada Reliefs | 110 |
Look Whos Laughing at Sex Men and Women Viewers in the Apodyterium of the Suburban Baths at Pompeii | 149 |
Political Movement Walking and Ideology in Republican Rome | 182 |
Being in the Eyes Shame and Sight in Ancient Rome | 216 |
Mapping Penetrability in Late Republican and Early Imperial Rome | 236 |
Looking at Looking Can You Resist a Reading? | 265 |
297 | |
323 | |
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