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TECHNOLOGY, SEX AND GENDER IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY

7th June 2019

EXETER/BERLIN TECHNOSÔMATA WORKSHOP SERIES

 WORKSHOP 1

 TECHNOLOGY, SEX AND GENDER IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY

7th of June 2019

Amory Building Room 315

 

Convened by: Maria Gerolemou

Supported by the Centre for Knowledge in Culture in Antiquity and Beyond and the Centre for Medical History, University of Exeter

This workshop proposes to explore the ways that technology (defined as techniques) produces, configures or reshapes gender and sexuality. Cosmetics, prosthetics, athletics, pharmaceutics and sexual tools can all be considered in terms of enhancement technologies with a variety of aims, including longevity, and at healthier and improved appearance. In this respect, they have a pervasive impact on gender, as they redefine the limits of the physical body, as well as on sexuality in terms of rewriting the script for erotic action emphasizing sexual pleasure, or assisting/preventing reproduction.

8.45-9.00 Registration

 

9.00-9.15: Kate Fisher, Rebecca Langlands, Maria Gerolemou, Introductory speech

 

9.15-10.00, Jane Draycott (Glasgow), Gendering Therapeutic Body Modification and Bodily Enhancement Technologies

 

10.00-10.45, Maria Gerolemou (Exeter), Want to look younger and beautiful? Steamy baths in classical antiquity

 

10.45-11.15 Coffee/Tea Break

 

11.15-12.00, Alessia Gurdasole (CNRS Paris), Dysfunction (δυσέργεια) and deformity (ἀπρέπεια) in Paul of Aegina’s surgical chapters

 

12.00-12.45, Daniel King (Exeter), Galen’s athletics

 

12.45-1.30, Genevieve Liveley (Bristol), Natural born cyborgs: Or, when Talos met Medea

 

1.30-2.30, Lunch

 

2.30-3.15, Laurence Totelin (Cardiff), Lizards and Lettuces: aphrodisiacs as technosõmata

 

3.15-4.00, Francesca Spiegel (HU Berlin), The Abortion of Oedipus: On contraception

 

4.00-4.45, Karen Ni-Mheallaigh (Exeter), Prosthetic penises and removable eyes: bionic life on the Moon

 

4.45-5.15 Coffee/Tea Break

 

5.15-6.00, Giulia Maria Chesi (HU Berlin), Ethiopian cosmetics vs. Persian commotics in Herodotus’ Ethiopian logos

 

6.00-6.45, Martin Devecka (UC Santa Cruz), The Human Touch: Prosthetic Gendering of Animal Bodies in the Roman Empire

 

7.30 Dinner

Details

Date:
7th June 2019

Organiser

Rebecca Langlands
Email
R.Langlands@exeter.ac.uk

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