Erotica in ancient Greece  

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The [[ancient Greece|ancient Greeks]] often painted sexual scenes on their [[Ceramic art|ceramics]], many of them famous for being some of the earliest depictions of [[homosexuality|same-sex relations]] and [[pederasty]]. Greek art often portrays sexual activity, but it is impossible to distinguish between what to them was illegal or immoral since the ancient Greeks did not have a concept of pornography. Their art simply reflects scenes from daily life, some more sexual than others. Carved [[phallus|phalli]] can be seen in places of worship such as the temple of [[Dionysus]] on [[Delos]], while a common household item and protective charm was the [[herma|herm]], a statue consisting of a head on a square plinth with a prominent phallus on the front. The Greek male ideal had a [[small penis]], an aesthetic the Romans later adopted. The Greeks also created the first well-known instance of [[lesbianism in erotica|lesbian eroticism]] in the West, with [[Sappho]]'s ''[[Hymn to Aphrodite]]'' and other [[homoeroticism|homoerotic]] works. The [[ancient Greece|ancient Greeks]] often painted sexual scenes on their [[Ceramic art|ceramics]], many of them famous for being some of the earliest depictions of [[homosexuality|same-sex relations]] and [[pederasty]]. Greek art often portrays sexual activity, but it is impossible to distinguish between what to them was illegal or immoral since the ancient Greeks did not have a concept of pornography. Their art simply reflects scenes from daily life, some more sexual than others. Carved [[phallus|phalli]] can be seen in places of worship such as the temple of [[Dionysus]] on [[Delos]], while a common household item and protective charm was the [[herma|herm]], a statue consisting of a head on a square plinth with a prominent phallus on the front. The Greek male ideal had a [[small penis]], an aesthetic the Romans later adopted. The Greeks also created the first well-known instance of [[lesbianism in erotica|lesbian eroticism]] in the West, with [[Sappho]]'s ''[[Hymn to Aphrodite]]'' and other [[homoeroticism|homoerotic]] works.
-==Literature==+==Lysistrata==
:''[[Lysistrata]]'' :''[[Lysistrata]]''
'''''Lysistrata''''' loosely translated to "she who disbands armies", is an [[anti-war]] [[Greek comedy]], written in [[411 BCE]] by [[Aristophanes]]. A group of women go on a [[sex strike]] as long as their husbands persist in going to war, thus the play is also an allegory of the [[war of the sexes]]. It was most famously illustrated by the British illustrator [[Aubrey Beardsley]]. '''''Lysistrata''''' loosely translated to "she who disbands armies", is an [[anti-war]] [[Greek comedy]], written in [[411 BCE]] by [[Aristophanes]]. A group of women go on a [[sex strike]] as long as their husbands persist in going to war, thus the play is also an allegory of the [[war of the sexes]]. It was most famously illustrated by the British illustrator [[Aubrey Beardsley]].
 +
 +==Baubo==
 +:''[[Baubo]]''
 +
 +'''Baubo''' is an [[old woman]] in [[Greek mythology]] who [[jested]] with [[Demeter]] when she was mourning the loss of her daughter [[Persephone]].
 +
 +In his ''[[Greek Myths]]'', [[Robert Graves]] writes that Demeter (in disguise) was the guest of King Celeus in [[Eleusis]]. The lame daughter of the King, [[Iambe]], "tried to console Demeter with comically [[lascivious]] verses, and a [[dry nurse]], old Baubo, persuaded her to drink barley-water by a jest: she groaned as if in great travail and, unexpectedly, produced from beneath her skirt Demeter's own son [[Iacchus]], who leapt into his mother's arms and kissed her." Graves writes, "Iambe and Baubo personify the obscene songs, in [[iamb]]ic metre, which were sung to relieve emotional tension at the [[Eleusinian Mysteries]]; but Iambe, Demeter, and Baubo form the familiar [[Triad (relationship)|triad]] of [[maiden]], [[nymph]], and [[crone]]. Old nurses in Greek myth nearly always stand for the goddess as crone."
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Homosexuality in ancient Greece, erotica, Greece, pederasty, Sotadic zone, male prostitution in the arts

The ancient Greeks often painted sexual scenes on their ceramics, many of them famous for being some of the earliest depictions of same-sex relations and pederasty. Greek art often portrays sexual activity, but it is impossible to distinguish between what to them was illegal or immoral since the ancient Greeks did not have a concept of pornography. Their art simply reflects scenes from daily life, some more sexual than others. Carved phalli can be seen in places of worship such as the temple of Dionysus on Delos, while a common household item and protective charm was the herm, a statue consisting of a head on a square plinth with a prominent phallus on the front. The Greek male ideal had a small penis, an aesthetic the Romans later adopted. The Greeks also created the first well-known instance of lesbian eroticism in the West, with Sappho's Hymn to Aphrodite and other homoerotic works.

Lysistrata

Lysistrata

Lysistrata loosely translated to "she who disbands armies", is an anti-war Greek comedy, written in 411 BCE by Aristophanes. A group of women go on a sex strike as long as their husbands persist in going to war, thus the play is also an allegory of the war of the sexes. It was most famously illustrated by the British illustrator Aubrey Beardsley.

Baubo

Baubo

Baubo is an old woman in Greek mythology who jested with Demeter when she was mourning the loss of her daughter Persephone.

In his Greek Myths, Robert Graves writes that Demeter (in disguise) was the guest of King Celeus in Eleusis. The lame daughter of the King, Iambe, "tried to console Demeter with comically lascivious verses, and a dry nurse, old Baubo, persuaded her to drink barley-water by a jest: she groaned as if in great travail and, unexpectedly, produced from beneath her skirt Demeter's own son Iacchus, who leapt into his mother's arms and kissed her." Graves writes, "Iambe and Baubo personify the obscene songs, in iambic metre, which were sung to relieve emotional tension at the Eleusinian Mysteries; but Iambe, Demeter, and Baubo form the familiar triad of maiden, nymph, and crone. Old nurses in Greek myth nearly always stand for the goddess as crone."




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