Description

Book Synopsis

Revenants, oracular heads, hermaphrodites, sex-changers, human-animal children, multiple pregnancies, births, body features … This is just a sample of subjects that Phlegon of Tralles explored in the 2nd century AD in his "Mirabilia". This study identifies the common motifs of Phlegon’s text and determines his criterion of selection: using the cultural category of "monster", it argues that Phlegon exclusively collected stories of either hybrid creatures or human "record-breakers" with respect to scale, size and multiplicity of their corporeal features. In this light, the "Mirabilia" appear to be a book on monsters and the monstrous that corresponds with a general fondness for marvels and oddities during the Roman imperial period.



Table of Contents

Monsters – Monstrosity – Neither Dead nor Alive – Neither Woman nor Man – Neither Human nor Animal – Revenants or Walking Corpses – Hermaphrodites: The God vs. The Monsters – Sex-changers – Freaks of Nature – Paradoxography – Deformed Slaves – The Emperor as a Patron of Monsters – Grotesque and bizarre – Corporeality – Deformation – Teratology

The Monstrous World: Corporeal Discourses in

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    A Hardback by Julia Doroszewska

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 09/08/2016
      ISBN13: 9783631656266, 978-3631656266
      ISBN10: 3631656262

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Revenants, oracular heads, hermaphrodites, sex-changers, human-animal children, multiple pregnancies, births, body features … This is just a sample of subjects that Phlegon of Tralles explored in the 2nd century AD in his "Mirabilia". This study identifies the common motifs of Phlegon’s text and determines his criterion of selection: using the cultural category of "monster", it argues that Phlegon exclusively collected stories of either hybrid creatures or human "record-breakers" with respect to scale, size and multiplicity of their corporeal features. In this light, the "Mirabilia" appear to be a book on monsters and the monstrous that corresponds with a general fondness for marvels and oddities during the Roman imperial period.



      Table of Contents

      Monsters – Monstrosity – Neither Dead nor Alive – Neither Woman nor Man – Neither Human nor Animal – Revenants or Walking Corpses – Hermaphrodites: The God vs. The Monsters – Sex-changers – Freaks of Nature – Paradoxography – Deformed Slaves – The Emperor as a Patron of Monsters – Grotesque and bizarre – Corporeality – Deformation – Teratology

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