Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editors’ Preface: Interpretive Lenses in Sociology—On the Multidimensional Foundations of Meaning in Social Life
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction: Interpretive Sociology and the Semiotic Imagination
- 1 Marked and Unmarked: A Semiotic Distinction for Concept-driven Interpretive Sociology
- 2 Blumer, Weber, Peirce, and the Big Tent of Semiotic Sociology: Notes on Interactionism, Interpretivism, and Semiotics
- 3 Collective Agency: A Semiotic View
- 4 Theorizing Side-directed Behavior
- 5 Cultural Syntax and the Rules of Meaning-making: A New Paradigm for the Interpretation of Culture
- 6 Memory, Cultural Systems, and Anticipation
- 7 Stigma-embedded Semiotics: Indexical Dilemmas of HIV across Local and Migrant Networks
- 8 Supremacy or Symbiosis? The Effect of Gendered Ideologies of the Transhuman versus Posthuman on Wearable Technology and Biodesign
- Index
7 - Stigma-embedded Semiotics: Indexical Dilemmas of HIV across Local and Migrant Networks
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editors’ Preface: Interpretive Lenses in Sociology—On the Multidimensional Foundations of Meaning in Social Life
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction: Interpretive Sociology and the Semiotic Imagination
- 1 Marked and Unmarked: A Semiotic Distinction for Concept-driven Interpretive Sociology
- 2 Blumer, Weber, Peirce, and the Big Tent of Semiotic Sociology: Notes on Interactionism, Interpretivism, and Semiotics
- 3 Collective Agency: A Semiotic View
- 4 Theorizing Side-directed Behavior
- 5 Cultural Syntax and the Rules of Meaning-making: A New Paradigm for the Interpretation of Culture
- 6 Memory, Cultural Systems, and Anticipation
- 7 Stigma-embedded Semiotics: Indexical Dilemmas of HIV across Local and Migrant Networks
- 8 Supremacy or Symbiosis? The Effect of Gendered Ideologies of the Transhuman versus Posthuman on Wearable Technology and Biodesign
- Index
Summary
In his Symposium, Plato stages a dialogue between two male lovers— philosopher Socrates and military general Alcibiades— to reflect on tensions between a physical, baser love and a virtuous, nobler love. The latter is closer to a pure Form of Beauty. Throughout the Symposium, these two kinds of love are examined in a series of dialogues by banquet guests, who are distinguished men of Athenian society and many married to women:
‘Socrates, are you asleep?’ ‘Not at all,’ he said … I said, ‘you’re the only lover I’ve ever had who's good enough for me, but you seem to be too shy to talk about it to me’ … And then he said … ‘My dear Alcibiades … You must be seeing in me a beauty beyond comparison and one that's far superior to your own good looks. … You’re trying to get true beauty in return for its appearance, and so to make an exchange that is really ‘gold for bronze’. … ‘When I heard this, I said … ‘It's now up to you to consider what you think is best for you and for me.’ (Plato, 1999 [c. 385 bc], pp. 57–8)
For our purposes, what is remarkable about these dialogues is not so much their deep philosophical exploration of Eros but that such exploration is expressed in contexts of homoeroticism and the beauty of the male body. In fact, unlike most modern heterosexual men, these banquet men seem unconcerned about threats to their masculinity when publicly discussing same-sex desires or bisexual behaviors.
As other scholars have noted, one of the West's greatest ironies is that its first explicit philosophical reflection on love begins as a discussion of homoerotic love. In fact, in Archaic and Classical Greece male–female relations were rarely eroticized. The “romanticization” of male–female courtship develops later in Hellenistic and Roman times and flourishes in our Christian era with the troubadour literary phenomenon (Konstan, 1994). Eventually, in contrast to Ancient Greece where it could be signified as a virtue, in our modern West, male homoerotic desire became medically signified as a neurosis. To clarify, I am not claiming that homoerotic desires in Ancient Greece (typically intergenerational) and the modern West (typically among consenting adults) are of the same “kind.”
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- Interpretive Sociology and the Semiotic Imagination , pp. 158 - 180Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023