Image for Sexing the World: Grammatical Gender and Biological Sex in Ancient Rome

Sexing the World: Grammatical Gender and Biological Sex in Ancient Rome

See all formats and editions

From the moment a child in ancient Rome began to speak Latin, the surrounding world became populated with objects possessing grammatical gendermasculine eyes (oculi), feminine trees (arbores), neuter bodies (corpora).

Sexing the World surveys the many ways in which grammatical gender enabled Latin speakers to organize aspects of their society into sexual categories, and how this identification of grammatical gender with biological sex affected Roman perceptions of Latin poetry, divine power, and the human hermaphrodite.Beginning with the ancient grammarians, Anthony Corbeill examines how these scholars used the gender of nouns to identify the sex of the object being signified, regardless of whether that object was animate or inanimate.

This informed the Roman poets who, for a time, changed at whim the grammatical gender for words as seemingly lifeless as dust (pulvis) or tree bark (cortex).

Corbeill then applies the idea of fluid grammatical gender to the basic tenets of Roman religion and state politics.

He looks at how the ancients tended to construct Romes earliest divinities as related male and female pairs, a tendency that waned in later periods.

An analogous change characterized the dual-sexed hermaphrodite, whose sacred and political significance declined as the republican government became an autocracy.

Throughout, Corbeill shows that the fluid boundaries of sex and gender became increasingly fixed into opposing and exclusive categories.

Sexing the World contributes to our understanding of the power of language to shape human perception.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£88.44
Product Details
Princeton University Press
1400852463 / 9781400852468
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
18/01/2015
English
199 pages
Copy: 100%; print: 100%