1. Introduction: How and Whether to Say 'Disability' in Ancient
Greek and Latin, Christian Laes, University of Manchester, UK and
the University of Antwerp, Belgium
2. Atypical Bodies: Extraordinary Body Treatment and Consideration,
Caroline Husquin, University of Lille, France
3. Mobility Impairment: Identifying Lived Experiences in Roman
Italy, Emma-Jayne Graham, Open University, UK
4. Chronic Pain and Illness: Pain and Meaning in Graeco-Roman
Antiquity, Laurien Zurhake, Open University, UK
5. Blindness: Visual Impairments in Antiquity, Frederik Van den
Abeele, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium
6. Deafness: Sensory Impairment as Communication Disability, Past
and Present, Ellen Adams, King’s College, London, UK
7. Speech: Lack of Language, Lack of Power: Social Aspects of the
Discourse about Communication Disorders in the Graeco-Roman World,
Peter Kruschwitz, University of Reading, UK
8. Learning Difficulties: Intellectual Disability (= ID) in the
Ancient Near East (ANE), Classical and Late Antiquity, Edgar
Kellenberger, University of Basel, Switzerland
9. Mental Health Issues: Theory and Practice in the Ancient World,
Jerry Toner, Hughes Hall, Cambridge, UK
The definitive overview of the cultural history of disability in the ancient world.
Christian Laes is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Manchester, UK and Professor of Ancient History and Latin at the University of Antwerp, Belgium. He is the author of Children in the Roman Empire (2011), Disabilities and the Disabled in the Roman World (2018), and edited volumes in three of Bloomsbury’s Cultural Histories series: A Cultural History of Education in Antiquity, A Cultural History of Youth in Antiquity (with Ville Vuolanto) and a Cultural History of Disability in Antiquity. He is co-author, along with Johan Strubbe, of Youth in the Roman Empire (2014).
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