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purple motes

Artifacts to help you imagine more.

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Highlights

  • Abelard castrated
  • Byzantine wife saves husband
  • Amphitryon & Geta duped
  • Chastelaine de Vergi tragedy
  • Aristotle’s advice to Alexander
  • Empress Theodora: woman leader
  • Tristan & Isuet
  • Xanthippe & Socrates
  • New Modern Sexism Scale

Satyricon

The Satyricon (also called Satyrica) is a Latin work thought to have been written about 65 GC by Gaius Petronius Arbiter. The Satyricon mixes prose and poetry and combines in places epic diction with mundane, comic events. It chronicles the misadventures of the retired illustrious gladiator Encolpius, his sixteen-year-old boyfriend Giton, and the lecherous old poet Eumolpus. The Satyricon depicts marginalized men’s encounters with highly privileged women as these men strive to improve their lives and enjoy their sexuality.

declamation in Satyricon’s school of rhetoric: a gendered perspective

The highly rhetorical Satyricon begins with declamations that parody criticism of education. A gendered perspective shows current application to feminism. … Read the post declamation in Satyricon’s school of rhetoric: a gendered perspective

curing Encolpius’s impotence: Proselenos & Oenothea unlike Jesus

In the Satyricon, Proselenos & Oenothea sought to cure Encolpius’s impotence. They mocked Jesus without his selfless love and healing success. … Read the post curing Encolpius’s impotence: Proselenos & Oenothea unlike Jesus

epic disaster of men’s impotence: Encolpius in the Satyricon

Encolpius suffered impotence with Circe in the Satyricon. The Virgilian cento describing his drooping penis proclaims the epic disaster of men’s impotence. … Read the post epic disaster of men’s impotence: Encolpius in the Satyricon

resurrection: overcoming the poetic problem with penises & erections

Despite metaphorical figuring of the penis as a weapon of violence, men’s erections should invoke hope for resurrection as in Abu Nuwas’s Arabic poetry. … Read the post resurrection: overcoming the poetic problem with penises & erections

ancient Latin literature in Sanger's 19th-century social science

In reading ancient Latin literature, pioneering 19th-century social scientist William Sanger didn’t distinguish between cultural constructions and reality. … Read the post ancient Latin literature in Sanger's 19th-century social science

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