Erika Zimmermann Damer is an associate professor of classics and of women, gender, and sexuality studies at the University of Richmond.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Acknowledgments Introduction: Embodied Selves and the Body in Elegy Part 1. Our Bodies, Ourselves 1. Embodied Identity and the scripta puella in Propertius 2. Tibullan Embodiments: Slaves, Soldiers, and the Body as Costume 3. The Body in Bad Faith: Gender and Embodiment in the Amores Part 2. Blood, Sex, and Tears: Problems of Embodiment in Roman Elegy 4. Naked Selves: Sex, Violence, and Embodied Identities 5. Body Talk: Cynthia Speaks 6. Not the Elegiac Ideal: Gendering Blood, Wounds, and Gore in Roman Love Elegy Conclusion Notes References Index Locorum Index
"A refreshingly new reading of Roman love elegy that brilliantly studies the flesh and blood of elegy's men and women. These bodies are not always perfect--as they resist the consummation of inscription, they often appear wounded, repulsive, and macabre. Anyone interested in Latin poetry should read this splendid book." --Ionnis Ziogas, Durham University "Moving beyond theorizing about the textualized body in Roman elegy, and taking her cue from feminist 'new materialisms, ' Zimmermann Damer reasserts the presence in elegiac poetry of bodies themselves, with all their abject materiality, genderedness, and sexiness. An impressive study that is a delight to read." --David Wray, University of Chicago "Elegantly eloquent, informatively thought-provoking, impressively organized and presented . . . an exceptional work of meticulous and dedicated scholarship"--Midwest Book Review