Greek Sexuality
Greek
sexuality in the ancient period can be seen in two distinct ways:
that of Foucault as being devoid of sexual discrimination and that of
John Boswell as being sexually defined.
Between these two historians lay many examples pointing to a clear
emphasis is the classical period on understood and socially
constructed homosexual relationships that differed dramatically in
clearly defined ways.
These examples will be used to support John Boswell's illustration of
sexuality in the classical Greek period as superior to Foucault's.
There are two distinct areas within this sexuality that illustrate
the existence of homosexuality in the classical period,
in light of Foucault's insistence that this distinction is not
possible.
The first area is in overturning the assumption that passivity and
activity in homosexual relations
were necessarily different than in heterosexual ones.
The second is in determining that age does define the appropriate
context of a homosexual relationship.
Defining passivity and
activity in the Greek classical world as a tool to be used in
determining the socio-sexual determination of the participants
involved is shaky at best.
In need of even graver consideration is the defining of homosexual
men as members of a lower class than heterosexual men based on the
socio-sexual determination of activity and passivity.
In his work The History of Sexuality
Foucault
paints a picture of homosexual men as being regarded as inferior to
heterosexual men due to the perceived effeminacy that homosexuals are
supposedly labeled with for their 'passive' acts.
Farther from the truth Foucault could not get.
Plato states in the Symposium,
“Those
who love men and rejoice to lie with and be embraced by men are also
the finest boys and young me,
being naturally the most manly.
The people who accuse them of shamelessness lie;...A
clear proof of this is the fact that as adults they alone acquit
themselves as men in public careers.”1
Plato,
one of the most accomplished and respected citizens of Athens,
goes on to reason that homosexual soldiers would make the best army
in the world.2
To limit the understanding of sexuality in the classical world to
socially relative terms such as activity and passivity is
academically inaccurate when there is first hand accounts that
clearly show the existence and celebration of the homosexual
lifestyle.
Even in Greek mythology there are myriad examples of homosexual
action.3
The heterosexual love of ancient Greece was even displayed as
something that was transcended by homosexual love.
According to Boswell,
”The Attic law-giver Solon considered homosexual eroticism too
lofty for slaves and prohibited it to them.”4
The
other area in which Boswell draws a distinction between modern
historical study and the actuality of the period is in the age
discrimination that was purportedly applied to same sex
relationships.
Foucault portrays these relationships as occurring almost solely
between young boys and old men.
He seems to encourage the idea that same sex relationships
(homosexuality) between two older men would result in those parties
becoming social outcasts.
However the opposite is actually true.
Apart from the quotes above,
Boswell also portrays this discrimination between age as against what
Foucault is implying.
The ageism here means that now Foucault is further distinguishing
male on male sexuality not just as homosexual (a term which is
supposed to subsume all other archetypes of male on male sexual
relations but) act but now as a homosexual,
age dependent act.
For example,
Euripides at age seventy was loved by and in love with Agathon.5
This is just one among many example that Boswell is able to provide.
Furthermore,
with respect to activity/passivity,
there is no unambiguous document that defines age as a criterion for
determining who was the one to be loved and who would love the
beloved.
Because of the lack of factual evidence,
Foucault appears to be using later texts of the Middle Ages when
attempting to explain the clearly homosexual-friendly reality of the
classical Greek world.
In
all Foucault is wrong in assuming that homosexual relationships in
classical Greece were generally considered socially unacceptable with
the only exception being based on a different age dynamic.
Instead,
classical Greece was a place of homosexual acceptance and even
celebration with homosexual relationships being held,
in many instances,
in a higher regard than heterosexual relationships.
Furthermore the idea that homosexual relationships were looked down
upon is clearly dispelled by Boswell.
2
Boswell,
John.
"Introduction."
In Christianity,
social tolerance,
and homosexuality: gay people in Western Europe from the beginning
of the Christian era to the fourteenth century.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1980.
p 25.
3ibid
(see Hercules)
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