Sex and Difference in Ancient Greece and Rome

May 13, 2012 15:57

Dropping in with a snippet from Sex and Difference in Ancient Greece and Rome which I have to return to the library yesterday. I've commented before that I keep coming across the idea that "androgynous" and "neuter" are somehow synonymous. Discussing Dionysus, Michael Jameson contrasts Dionysus' strong association with sex with the god's own seeming lack of interest in it: "One can refer to the god's detachment as 'asexuality' [but] one might also speak of his bisexuality, the coexistence of elements of both genders that may, in effect, cancel each other out, or even of his transcendence of sexuality." No time to outline Jameson's full argument here, but there are two possible explanations for why, according to some thinking, if you're both sexes then you're neither. (Jameson also compares Dionysus to the male lead singer of a rock band, "neither traditionally masculine nor yet effeminate". :)

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Jameson, Michael. "The Asexuality of Dionysus". in Golden, Mark and Peter Toohey (eds). Sex and Difference in Ancient Greece and Rome. Edinburgh, EUP, 2008.

god: dionysus, subject: sex and gender, culture: roman

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