Artigo Revisado por pares

In cold blood: dead athletes in Classical Athens

2012; Routledge; Volume: 44; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/00438243.2012.669639

ISSN

1470-1375

Autores

Susanne Turner,

Tópico(s)

Martial Arts: Techniques, Psychology, and Education

Resumo

Abstract Abstract Dead young men were commonly represented as athletes on classical Attic grave stelai, either alone or with a smaller subsidiary slave figure. This paper explores the ways in which the context of death re-figures the athlete, playing on the connotations of victory statues while simultaneously exploiting the gap between the athletic body on display and the absent presence of the dead body beneath the surface. Bodies are at issue on the grave stelai, not least since Greek athletes train and compete naked. By interrogating the ways in which the athletic body is mobilized in different contexts – the commemoration of victory and the commemoration of death – I explore the ways in which ancient Greek culture puts to work sport and the sportsman. Keywords: Commemorationmasculinitynuditybodiesathletic victoryathletic training Notes Abbreviations used in citations in text: CAT: Classical Attic Tombstones (Clairmont 1993 Clairmont, C. W. 1993. Classical Attic Tombstones, 9 vols, Kilchberg: Akanthus. [Google Scholar]); IG: Inscriptiones Graecae; SEG: Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum.

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