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OVID'S HERMAPHRODITUS AND THE MOLLIS MALE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 June 2022
Extract
Figures of intersexed individuals perhaps representing the minor Greek deity Hermaphroditus became, for reasons that are not entirely clear, strikingly popular in Roman sculpture and wall painting in the latter half of the first century CE. Depicting a fully bisexed human body, these figures have resulted in competing interpretations regarding their purpose, meaning, and effect. As it happens, we also have a text from the Augustan period that purports to explain not only the origin of the intersexed Hermaphroditus, but the production of future bisexed individuals, in Ovid's Metamorphoses Book 4. When discussing the sculptures and wall paintings of Hermaphroditus, as a result, scholars have been inevitably drawn to Ovid's narrative. The pull of Ovid is admittedly almost irresistible, and his reputation as a poet who challenges norms, conventions, and genres makes it attractive to see him as creating room for modern notions of gender fluidity. As Georgia Nugent argued more than thirty years ago, however, Ovid's narrative is, in curious ways, a reductive version of the myth, ‘a paradigmatic example of how what is sexually threatening may be textually recuperated and stabilized’. I wish to reanimate Nugent's arguments here, and to suggest that scholars’ regular invocation of Ovid when interpreting the products of Roman art is a mistake, for two reasons: first, the figure Ovid describes is, in fact, not typical of what we see in Roman sculptures and wall paintings; and second, Ovid presents a version of Hermaphroditus’ gender identity that is deliberately less challenging to the stability of sexual binarism—and to traditional gender roles—than are those material depictions. For those of us who wish to advocate for the rights of intersexed individuals, in other words, Ovid is the wrong champion.
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- Copyright © Ramus 2022
Footnotes
I owe thanks to many people for helping me develop and refine the ideas in this article. The piece began as a short presentation at the conference on Feminism and Classics VI: Visions at the University of Washington in 2016, organized by Ruby Blondell, Kathryn Topper, Deborah Kamen, and Sarah Levin-Richardson. My co-panelists Rebecca Lees, Christian Lehmann, and Paula James provided rich discussion, as did the audience there. After that the paper benefitted from an early presentation at Cornell University, where Athena Kirk and members the Department of Classics made numerous useful suggestions. Finally, an invitation to present the full version of the paper as the Sullivan Lecture at the University of California Santa Barbara gave me the impetus I needed to bring it into shape. Sara Lindheim, Helen Morales, Anthony Boyle, and a number of members of the audience there, including Joe Farrell, asked perceptive questions and helped me find a path out of various difficulties. Needless to say, any errors and omissions that remain are my own.