• Elsner, John, “Naturalism and the Erotics of the Gaze: Intimations of Narcissus,” in Sexuality in Ancient Art: Near East, Egypt, Greece, and Italy edited by N. Kampen: CUP (1996) / web link
  • Judith Fletcher, “Exchanging Glances: Vision and Representation in Aeschylus’ Agamemnon,” Helios 26.1 (1999) 11-34
  • David Fredrick, The Roman gaze: vision, power, and the body, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press (2002) [Introduction: Invisible Rome / David Fredrick; 1. Split Vision: The Politics of the Gaze in Seneca’s Troades / Cindy Benton; 2. This Ship of Fools: Epic Vision in Lucan’s Vulteius Episode / Katherine Owen Eldred; 3. Some Unseen Monster: Rereading Lucretius on Sex / Pamela Gordon; 4. Reading Programs in Greco-Roman Art: Reflections on the Spada Reliefs / Zahra Newby; 5. Look Who’s Laughing at Sex: Men and Women Viewers in the Apodyterium of the Suburban Baths at Pompeii / John R. Clarke; 6. Political Movement: Walking and Ideology in Republican Rome / Anthony Corbeill; 7. Being in the Eyes: Shame and Sight in Ancient Rome / Carlin Barton; 8. Mapping Penetrability in Late Republican and Early Imperial Rome / David Fredrick; 9. Looking at Looking: Can You Resist a Reading? / Alison R. Sharrock]
  • Francoise Frontisi-Ducroux, “Eros Desire and the Gaze,” in Sexuality in Ancient Art: Near East, Egypt, Greece, and Italy edited by N. Kampen, Cambridge: CUP (1996)
  • Christopher Gill, “The Sexual Episodes in the Satyricon,” Classical Philology 68.3 (1973) 172-185 / full text
  • C. M. Havelock, The Aphrodite of Knidos and Her Successors: A Historical Review of the Female Nude in Greek Art, Ann Arbor (1995) / bmcr
  • Martha C. Nussbaum and Juha Sihvola, The Sleep of Reason: Erotic Experience and Sexual Ethics in Ancient Greece and Rome, Chicago: University of Chicago Press (2002) [“Forgetting Foucault: Acts, Identities, and the History of Sexuality,” David M. Halperin; “Eros and Ethical Norms: Philosophers Respond to a Cultural Dilemma,” Martha C. Nussbaum; “Erotic Experience in the Conjugal Bed: Good Wives in Greek Tragedy,” Maarit Kaimo; “Aristophanic Sex: The Erotics of Shamelessness,” Stephen Halliwell; “The Legend of the Sacred Band,” David Leitao; “Plato, Zeno, and the Object of Love,” A. W. Price; “Aristotle on Sex and Love,” Juha Sihvola; “Two Women of Samos,” Kenneth Dover; “The First Homosexuality,” David M. Halperin; “Marriage and Sexuality in Republican Rome: A Roman Conjugal Love Story,” Eva Cantarella; “The Incomplete Feminism of Musonius Rufus, Platonist, Stoic, and Roman,” Martha C. Nussbaum; “Eros and Aphrodisa in the Works of Dio Chrysostom,” J. Samuel Houser; “Enacting Eros,” David Konstan; “The Erotic Experience of Looking: Cultural Conflict and the Gaze in Empire Culture,” Simon Goldhill; “Agents and Victims: Constructions of Gender and Desire in Ancient Greek Love Magic,” Christopher A. Faraone] / bmcr
  • R. Osborne, “Looking on — Greek Style. Does the Sculpted Girl Speak to Women Too?,” in Classical Greece: Ancient Histories and Modern Archaeologies edited by I. Morris, Cambridge: CUP (1994) 81-96 / bmcr
  • R. F. Sutton, Jr., “Pornography and Persuasion on Attic Pottery,” in Pornography and Representation in Greece and Rome edited by Amy Richlin, Oxford: Oxford UP (1991) 3-35 / bmcr
  • Nigel Spivey, “Revealing Aphrodite,” in Understanding Greek Sculpture : Ancient Meanings, Modern Readings: Thames and Hudson (1997)
  • E. Stehle, “Sappho’s Gaze: Fantasies of a Goddess and a Young Man,” differences 2 (1990) 88-125
  • Eva Stehle and Amy Day, “Women Looking at Women: Women’s Ritual and Temple Sculpture,” in Sexuality in Ancient Art: Near East, Egypt, Greece, and Italy edited by N. Kampen, Cambridge: CUP (1996)
  • Andrew Stewart, “Mirrors of Desire,” in Sexuality in Ancient Art: Near East, Egypt, Greece, and Italy edited by N. Kampen, Cambridge (1996)
  • Andrew Stewart, Art, Desire and the Body in Ancient Greece, Cambridge: CUP (1997) [1. Perspectives, 2. Nakedness, 3. Tooling the Body, 4. Three Attic Ideologies, 5. Of War and Love, 6. “Womanufacture,” 7. The Athenian Body Politic, 8. Erotica , 9. Beyond the Walls, 10. Looking Forward: After Alexander, Appendix. Archaic and Early Classical Small Bronzes of Girls “Going Dorian”] / bmcr
  • Elizabeth H. Sutherland, “How (Not) to Look at a Woman: Bodily Encounters and the Failure of the Gaze in Horace’s C. 1.19,” AJPh 124 no. 1 (2003) 57-80