Alexander the Great
Myth, Genesis and Sexuality
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Liverpool University Press
Published:13th Oct '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
What are ancient texts saying to us when they describe Alexander the Great’s romantic relationship with his wife Barsine, or comment on his homosexual relationship with Hephaestion? What did it mean when the ancient writers told that Alexander had been sired by a thunderbolt or by a gigantic snake? What did it mean when they represented his mother Olympias as a witch? These questions and others are addressed in Alexander the Great: Myth and Sexuality. In this book, Daniel Ogden discusses the mythologizing of procreation and sex in the ancient traditions surrounding Alexander. From the author's Introduction: 'A quick review of [...] chapter titles will suggest that the first half [...] answers the title's promise of 'myth' and the second half that of 'sexuality', but in fact the entire volume is devoted to what may be termed 'myth' of one sort or another. Its central and unifying subject is the mythologizing of procreation and sex in the traditions surrounding the figure of Alexander the Great: accordingly, it comprises both treatments of the narratives spun around his own siring and birth on the one hand, and treatments of the narratives spun around the king's own procreative and sexual career on the other. A significant amount of this mythologizing [...] took root in Alexander's own age. The remainder of it is the product of subsequent tradition, a tradition that was evidently in vigorous development already within a few years of Alexander's death.'
... will repay the attention of a readership far broader than the community of Alexander and Hellenistic scholars to which it is obviously directed.
Thomas M Banchich, Bryn Mawr Classical Review * Mawr Classical Review *
"Highly recommended."
Near Eastern Archaeological Society Bulletin
- Short-listed for Runciman Prize 2012 (UK)
ISBN: 9780859898386
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
288 pages