Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Dedication
- Introduction: Queering Classics
- I Gender Construction
- 1 Gender Diversity in Classical Greek Thought
- 2 Blending Bodies in Classical Greek Medicine
- 3 Birth by Hammer: Pandora and the Construction of Bodies
- 4 Life after Transition: Spontaneous Sex Change and Its Aftermath in Ancient Literature
- II Gender Fluidity
- 5 Neutrumque et Utrumque Videntur: Reappraising the Gender Role(s) of Hermaphroditus in Ancient Art
- 6 Intersex and Intertext: Ovid’s Hermaphroditus and the Early Universe
- 7 Que(e)r(y)ing Iphis’ Transformation in Ovid’s Metamorphoses
- 8 Ruling in Purple … and Wearing Make-up: Gendered Adventures of Emperor Elagabalus as seen by Cassius Dio and Herodian
- III Transgender Identity
- 9 Allegorical Bodies: (Trans)gendering Virtus in Statius’ Thebaid 10 and Silius Italicus’ Punica 15
- 10 Performing Blurred Gender Lines: Revisiting Omphale and Hercules in Pompeian Dionysian Theatre Gardens
- 11 The Politics of Transgender Representation in Apuleius’ the Golden Ass and Loukios, or the Ass
- 12 Wit, Conventional Wisdom and Wilful Blindness: Intersections between Sex and Gender in Recent Receptions of the Fifth of Lucian’s Dialogues of the Courtesans
- IV Female Masculinity
- 13 Christianity Re-sexualised: Intertextuality and the Early Christian Novel
- 14 Manly and Monstrous Women: (De-)Constructing Gender in Roman Oratory
- 15 The Great Escape: Reading Artemisia in Herodotus’ Histories and 300: Rise of an Empire
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
11 - The Politics of Transgender Representation in Apuleius’ the Golden Ass and Loukios, or the Ass
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Dedication
- Introduction: Queering Classics
- I Gender Construction
- 1 Gender Diversity in Classical Greek Thought
- 2 Blending Bodies in Classical Greek Medicine
- 3 Birth by Hammer: Pandora and the Construction of Bodies
- 4 Life after Transition: Spontaneous Sex Change and Its Aftermath in Ancient Literature
- II Gender Fluidity
- 5 Neutrumque et Utrumque Videntur: Reappraising the Gender Role(s) of Hermaphroditus in Ancient Art
- 6 Intersex and Intertext: Ovid’s Hermaphroditus and the Early Universe
- 7 Que(e)r(y)ing Iphis’ Transformation in Ovid’s Metamorphoses
- 8 Ruling in Purple … and Wearing Make-up: Gendered Adventures of Emperor Elagabalus as seen by Cassius Dio and Herodian
- III Transgender Identity
- 9 Allegorical Bodies: (Trans)gendering Virtus in Statius’ Thebaid 10 and Silius Italicus’ Punica 15
- 10 Performing Blurred Gender Lines: Revisiting Omphale and Hercules in Pompeian Dionysian Theatre Gardens
- 11 The Politics of Transgender Representation in Apuleius’ the Golden Ass and Loukios, or the Ass
- 12 Wit, Conventional Wisdom and Wilful Blindness: Intersections between Sex and Gender in Recent Receptions of the Fifth of Lucian’s Dialogues of the Courtesans
- IV Female Masculinity
- 13 Christianity Re-sexualised: Intertextuality and the Early Christian Novel
- 14 Manly and Monstrous Women: (De-)Constructing Gender in Roman Oratory
- 15 The Great Escape: Reading Artemisia in Herodotus’ Histories and 300: Rise of an Empire
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In the second-century ad novels Loukios, or the Ass and Apuleius’ The Golden Ass (also known as the Metamorphoses), the man-turned-into-a-donkey Lucius is sold to a group of priests of the Syrian Goddess. Like the priests of Cybele with whom they are frequently linked, these figures are infamous in Greek and Latin literature for ecstatic music and dance, transvestism, self-castration, and suspect sexuality. In both the Greek and Latin novels, the first-person narrator Lucius calls them cinaedi, Graeco-Roman scare figures of gender and sexual deviance. The priests, however, never use this derogatory term, instead calling themselves ‘girls’ (puellae: Met. 8.26; korasia: Onos 36) and using feminine grammatical forms. In their own words, they construct feminine identities, adding to the evidence that some of the followers of Cybele and the Syrian Goddess – commonly referred to as galli – were transwomen and other assigned-male-at-birth individuals with diverse gender identities and sexual orientations (Roscoe 1996; Taylor 1997: 336, 371; Adkins 2014: 35–55; Blood 2015; Blood forthcoming; Carlà- Uhink 2017: 16–19). I argue that in the Greek and Latin novels, the primary locus of the priests’ contested identities is their speech. By juxtaposing Lucius‘ interpretation of the priests’ speech with their own words, I highlight the role of language as a mechanism of power, focusing on who has the authority to impose meaning and how this affects those whose social labels are at odds with their own identities and self-representations.
While Apuleius’ Latin novel is longer and has a different ending than the Greek Loukios, or the Ass (hereafter referred to by its abbreviated Greek name Onos), both relate the story of Lucius, a Roman Greek aristocrat who is transformed into a donkey. After a year of being stolen, bought and sold, he changes back into a man. Based on the similarities between these novels and the comments of the ninth-century patriarch Photios, they are thought to derive separately from a third novel, the lost Greek Metamorphoseis of Lucius of Patrae (Phot. Bibl. 129; van Thiel 1971: 1–21; Mason 1994, 1999a, 1999b).
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- Exploring Gender Diversity in the Ancient World , pp. 157 - 168Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2020