Preface Introduction The Ubiquity of Love Magic Definitions and a New Taxonomy The Advantages of a Synchronic and Comparative Approach Spells for Inducing Uncontrollable Passion (Eros) If Eros Is a Disease, Then Erotic Magic Is a Curse Jason's Iunx and the Greek Tradition of Agoge Spells Apples for Atlanta and Pomegranates for Persephone The Transitory Violence of Greek Weddings and Erotic Magic Spells for Inducing Affection (Philia) Aphrodite's Kestos Himas and Other Amuletic Love Charms Deianeira's Mistake: The Confusion of Love Potions and Poisons Narcotics and Knotted Cords: The Subversive Cast of Philia Magic Some Final Thoughts on History, Gender, and Desire From Aphrodite to the Restless Dead: A Brief History of the Agoge Spell Courtesans, Freedmen, and the Social Construction of Gender Aelian's Tortoises and the Representation of the Desiring Subject Glossary Abbreviations Bibliography Subject Index Index of Foreign Words Index of Passages from Ancient Authors Index of Magical Texts
Christopher A. Faraone is Professor and Chairman of Classics, University of Chicago.
Christopher Faraone's masterly Ancient Greek Love Magic [is] an
always intriguing--and often disturbing--exploration of ancient
erotic society. Faraone, an established expert on ancient magic and
ritual, examines the evidence for the two most-widely practiced
types of love magic: agoge spells, which lasso even the most ornery
of love-objects and philia spells, which prevent your significant
other from searching for greener pastures elsewhere...Faraone's
analysis of the interplay of gender and magic will be the book's
most important contribution; although agoge magic is usually
practiced by males and philia magic by females, the exceptions (and
there are some) point to the paradoxes inherent in Ancient Greek
constructions of gender...The book is a veritable encyclopedia of
fascinating magical recipes, and boasts many well-researched
variations on agoge and philia charms.
*Boston Book Review*
This is no dry tome or unimaginative catalogue of papyrus scraps
and voodoo "poppets". The dust-jacket promises a lucid analysis of
the large corpus of ritual teachings used by the Greeks to instill
or maintain various forms of desire and affection. Faraone delivers
the goods, focusing principally on interpersonal aphrodisiac magic:
though he does touch briefly on self-help potency spells, he is
more interested in those directed against another unconsenting
individual.
*Joint Association of Classical Teachers Review*
In Greek magic, erotic spells were generally used by men to induce
eros in women, while spells to maintain or induce affection
(philia) were mainly used by women toward men. Mr. Faraone argues
that exceptions to those generalities shed new light on the social
construction of gender in Greek society, as well as on the issue of
which sex was considered the more lascivious.
*Chronicle of Higher Education*
If any scholar is well-placed to produce a book on the topic of
ancient Greek love magic, it is certainly Christopher Faraone...A
useful glossary, full bibliography, and indispensable index of
terms, and an index of passages from the ancient authors, round out
the volume. This is without doubt a definitive work...Packed with
information. But, more importantly, it contains critical insights
and interpretations which show that Faraone is master of his
subject.
*Scholia Reviews*
This exemplary book studies ancient Greek magical spells designed
to attract or keep lovers, and it advances a clear and persuasive
argumentÂ…Wisely and with great care, Faraone uses a variety of
ancient sources, such as literary depictions of the use of magic,
to provide a thicker description of ancient erotic discourse.
*Journal of Interdisciplinary History*
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