100 likes | 231 Views
Unmanly Men and Manly Women. Crossing the gender boundaries in ancient Rome. Things the Romans found unmanly. Women the Romans found manly. Catullus 16.
E N D
Unmanly Men and Manly Women • Crossing the gender boundaries in ancient Rome
Catullus 16 • I'll jam it up your butt and down your throat,effeminate Aurelius and unmanly Furius,you who've deduced from my little poems,because they're somewhat soft and sensual, that I'm not quite proper.I'll admit that the dutiful poet ought to be modest of behavior himself, but there's no need for his poems to be —those only have wit and charmif they are somewhat soft and sensual and not quite properand have something in them that might arouse an itch,not in boys, but in those shaggy gray-beardswho can scarcely move their sluggish members. You two, because of what you read about thosemany thousands of kisses, do you think me less than a man?I'll jam it up your butt and down your throat.
Catullus 16.1-2 • “I'll jam it up your butt and down your throat,effeminate Aurelius and unmanly Furius,” • Aurelius and Furius are cinaedi • Cinaedi = unmales = what a man should not be, someone who deviated from the norm • Liked to be passive or unmasculine in sex • Not an ordinary Roman male, not a homosexual, but a sexual deviant
Catullus 16.4-8 • “you who've deduced from my little poems,because they're somewhat soft and sensual, that I'm not quite proper.I'll admit that the dutiful poet ought to be modest of behavior himself, but there's no need for his poems to be —” • Catullus is responding to claims his poetry is “soft” and “sensual” by offering to show both men he is the real man
Catullus 16.9-14 • “and have something in them that might arouse an itch, not in boys, but in those shaggy gray-beardswho can scarcely move their sluggish members. You two, because of what you read about thosemany thousands of kisses, do you think me less than a man? I'll jam it up your butt and down your throat.” • According to Catullus, passive roles in sexual activity are not acceptable
Agrippina, the wife of Claudius • From this point, the empire was changed. All obeyed a woman. But this was a woman without feminine frivolity. She was openly severe and often arrogant. Agrippina's dominance was almost masculine. Tacitus
Agrippina, wife of the emperor Claudius • Rejected femimine ideals of virtue • Seized power directly • Founded her own colony
Agrippina, the mother of the emperor Nero • Claudius was served a dish of poisoned mushrooms. He collapsed, teetering on the brink of death, then amazingly began to recover. Horrified, Agrippina quickly enlisted the Emperor's own physician in her crime. While pretending to help Claudius vomit his tainted food, the doctor put a feather dipped in poison down the Emperor's throat.