Foreword: The Book and Its Author (Stephen Halliwell, University of St Andrews, UK) Foreword: The Book and its Influence (Mark Masterson, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, and James Robson, Open University, UK) Preface Abbreviations I PROBLEMS, SOURCES AND METHODS 1 Scale 2 The Visual Arts 3 Literature 4 Vocabulary II THE PROSECUTION OF TIMARKHOS A The Law 1 Male Prostitution 2 Penalties 3 Status 4 Hubris B Manifestations of Eros 1 Defences against a Charge of Prostitution 2 Eros and Desire 3 Eros and Love 4 Following and Fighting 5 Homosexual Poetry C Nature and Society 1 Natura/Impulse 2 Male and Female Physique 3 Masculine and Feminine Styles 4 Pursuit and Flight 5 Courtship and Copulation 6 Dominant and Subordinate Roles III SPECIAL ASPECTS AND DEVELOPMENTS A Publicity B Predilections and Fantasies C Comic Exploitation D Philosophical Exploitation E Women and Homosexuality IV CHANGES A The Dorians B Myth and History Postscript, 1989 List of Vases Bibliography Index of Greek Texts and Documents Index of Greek Words General Index
A magisterial and highly influential volume, the standard work on Greek homosexuality, reissued for a new generation.
Sir Kenneth Dover was Professor of Greek at the University of St. Andrews and former President of Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford, UK. He published widely on ancient Greek writers, language and sexuality. Stephen Halliwell is Professor of Greek and Wardlaw Professor of Classics at the University of St Andrews, UK. Mark Masterson is Senior Lecturer in the School of Art History, Classics and Religious Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. James Robson is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Classical Studies at the Open University, UK.
An unprejudiced description of the homosexual phenomena depicted by
classical Greek artists and writers has long been an urgent
desideratum. Dover's book fills this need successfully. In its
collection and interpretation of the ancient evidence it will be
indispensable for broader and/or more specialized explorations of
the sexual aspects of Greek art and society.
*Classical World*
[Re-released] with fine new introductory material from Stephen
Halliwell ... This is arguably Dover's best, and unarguably his
most influential, book.
*Times Literary Supplement*
A landmark study.... One cannot underestimate the importance of Mr.
Dover's book. With philological brilliance and scholarly
objectivity, he presents facts that can no longer be ignored. It is
a step closer toward understanding the complex nature of the
Greeks, whom we claim as cultural fathers. It is also a step closer
to understanding human nature.
*New York Times Book Review*
In Greek classes past teachers used to slide quickly over the exact
nature of the relationships between men and boys in ancient
Athens.... In this expert, candid, and wry study all is made
clear.
*Washington Post*
Greek Homosexuality provides--finally--an unvarnished look at
Athenian homosexuality.... [It is] now the standard volume on the
subject.
*American Historical Review*
Dover's is an authoritative discussion; he is a philologist of
great stature with wide achievement as editor, commentator, and
literary critic.... The subject was one which needed to be exposed
to the light of day; we can be thankful that it has been done by a
great scholar and one who treats the subject without prejudice.
*New York Review of Books*
Halliwell, Masterson and Robson have provided a welcome gift to the
academic community. Their re-edition of Greek Homosexuality offers
to senior scholars a stimulating reading, while it presents to
younger students an exemplary book that shows how scientific
research should ideally open up new frontiers, leaving at the same
time space for further questions, debates and theorisations. This
is an iconic book indeed, one that not just concerns historical
phenomena, but which is a story in itself, a historiographical
milestone.
*The Classical Review*
Dover's text merits re-reading not just for its masterly synthesis
of a wide range of evidence and as a starting point for this rich
area of scholarship, but also for the balance he achieves in his
discussions of male same-sex relationships. ... [T]he picture he
paints of sexual relationships is arguably more rounded and human
than any subsequent scholar has achieved.
*ARGO: A Hellenic Review*
[A] welcome republication of the second edition (1989) of the late
Kenneth Dover’s ‘landmark’ study.
*Classics For All Reviews*
Dover's book has aged remarkably well. The clarity and simplicity
of the prose (what else would one expect from the leading scholar
on Lysias) ensures that there are few flourishes or ornaments to
date the text. The range of material discussed continues to
impress.
*Classics Ireland*
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