The Greek addition to Daniel Susanna and Chariton of Aphrodisias’ Callirhoe are early examples of novels/novella. These works reflect on legal protocol and the place of women vis-à-vis the law and the household, exposing female bodies to make their point. This article connects these features to ancient novelists’ utilisation of female bodies. Content warning: this article discusses sexual violence, rape and death. https://www.lectio.unibe.ch/en/archive/joseph-scales-susanna-and-callirhoe-female-bodies-law-and-novels.htm
The article investigates the value of Wolfgang Iser’s concept of repertoire for reading the apocryph...
oai:ojs.francigena:article/66This article examines the re-emergence of two biblical episodes – Josep...
This thesis examines the relationship of women writers to Hellenism in the latenineteenth century. I...
The article investigates the value of Wolfgang Iser’s concept of repertoire for reading the apocryp...
This dissertation investigates adultery and the appropriation of ritual space in Classical Greece, f...
This dissertation examines the representation of the body-text in the ‘Big Five’ Greek novels of the...
1970s and 1980s feminist writing about rape in relation to early modern legal practice and to its re...
How does a woman become a whore? What are the discursive dynamics making a woman a whore? And, more ...
When women rose to power in the ancient world and threatened the established patriarchal order, men ...
How does the treatment of women\u27s rituals in Latin poetry and prose reveal Roman ideas of female ...
Professor Jack Sasson explores the ancient text known as BM13912. In doing so he creates a profile o...
After a brief introduction to Solon and the Testamentary Law in the next section, Part III of this p...
That the Auchinleck manuscript is a book that was accessed by fourteenth century female readers has ...
The story of Susanna tells of a woman sexually assaulted, accused of adultery, sentenced to death, a...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.jstor.org/stable/268229
The article investigates the value of Wolfgang Iser’s concept of repertoire for reading the apocryph...
oai:ojs.francigena:article/66This article examines the re-emergence of two biblical episodes – Josep...
This thesis examines the relationship of women writers to Hellenism in the latenineteenth century. I...
The article investigates the value of Wolfgang Iser’s concept of repertoire for reading the apocryp...
This dissertation investigates adultery and the appropriation of ritual space in Classical Greece, f...
This dissertation examines the representation of the body-text in the ‘Big Five’ Greek novels of the...
1970s and 1980s feminist writing about rape in relation to early modern legal practice and to its re...
How does a woman become a whore? What are the discursive dynamics making a woman a whore? And, more ...
When women rose to power in the ancient world and threatened the established patriarchal order, men ...
How does the treatment of women\u27s rituals in Latin poetry and prose reveal Roman ideas of female ...
Professor Jack Sasson explores the ancient text known as BM13912. In doing so he creates a profile o...
After a brief introduction to Solon and the Testamentary Law in the next section, Part III of this p...
That the Auchinleck manuscript is a book that was accessed by fourteenth century female readers has ...
The story of Susanna tells of a woman sexually assaulted, accused of adultery, sentenced to death, a...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.jstor.org/stable/268229
The article investigates the value of Wolfgang Iser’s concept of repertoire for reading the apocryph...
oai:ojs.francigena:article/66This article examines the re-emergence of two biblical episodes – Josep...
This thesis examines the relationship of women writers to Hellenism in the latenineteenth century. I...