• James I. Porter (ed.), Constructions of the Classical Body: University of Michigan Press (1999) [Introduction; Smashing Bodies: The Corinthian Tydeus and Ismene Amphora (Louvre E640); Reflections on Erotic Desire in Archaic and Classical Greece; Dirt and Desire: The Phenomenology of Female Pollution in Antiquity; Pindar and the Prostitutes, or Reading Ancient “Pornography”; From a Grin to a Death: The Body in the Greek Discovery of Politics; Sexual Bodybuilding: Aeschines against Timarchus; Odor and Power in the Roman Empire; Cicero’s Head; The Roman Blush: The Delicate Matter of Self-Control; Anti-Pygmalion: The Praeceptor in Ars Amatoria, Book 3; The Suffering Body: Philosophy and Pain in Seneca’s Letters; Chronic Pain and the Creation of Narrative; Truth Contests and Talking Corpses; Sweet Honey in the Rock: Pleasure, Embodiment, and Metaphor in Late-Antique Platonism; Ovid’s Body; Herculean Muscle!: The Classicizing Rhetoric of Bodybuilding] / bmcr
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  • D. Bain, “Two Submerged Items of Greek Sexual Vocabulary from Aphrodisias,” ZPE 117 (1997) 81-84
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  • J. Boardman and E. LaRocca, Eros in Greece (1978) / web link
  • George Boys-Stones, “Eros in Government: Zeno and the Virtuous City,” The Classical Quarterly 48.1 (1998) 168-174 / full text
  • Brendel, Otto J., “The Scope and Temperament of Erotic Art in the Greco-Roman World,” in Studies in Erotic Art edited by Theodore Bowie and Cornelia V. Christenson, New York (1970) 3-69
  • Luc Brisson, Sexual Ambivalence: Androgyny and Hermaphroditism in Graeco-Roman Antiquity, translated from the French by Janet Lloyd, Berkeley: University of California Press (2002) [ISBN 0-520-23148-1 ] / bmcr
  • P. Brown, “Plots and Prostitutes in Greek New Comedy,” Pap. of Leeds Int’l Seminar 6 (1990) 241-66
  • P. Brown, “Love and Marriage in Greek New Comedy,” Classical Quarterly 43 (1993) 184-205 / full text
  • Joan B. Burton, “Abduction and Elopement in the Byzantine Novel,” GRBS 41 (2000) 377-409
  • Claude Calame, L’Eros dans la Grèce antique, Paris: Éditions Belin (1996) / bmcr
  • Calame, Claude, The Poetics of Eros in Ancient Greece, Princeton: Princeton University Press (1999)
  • Andrew Calimach, Lovers’ Legends: The Gay Greek Myths, New Rochelle: Haiduk Press [ISBN 0-9714686-0-5] / bmcr
  • E. Cantarella, Bisexuality in the Ancient World (1992) / web link  / web link
  • P. Cartledge, “The Politics of Spartan Pederasty,” PCPS 27 (1981) 17-36
  • W. M. Clarke, “Achilles and Patroclus in Love,” Hermes 106 (1978) 381-396
  • D. Cohen, Law, Sexuality, and Society. The Enforcement of Morals in Classical Athens, Cambridge (1991) / bmcr
  • D. Cohen, “Sexuality, Violence, and the Athenian Law of Hybris,” Greece & Rome 38 (1991) 171-188 / full text
  • D. Cohen, “Debate (with Clifford Handley): Law, Society and Homosexuality in Classical Athens,” Past and Present 133 (1991) 167-194
  • D. Cohen, “Review Article: Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in Ancient Greece,” Classical Philology 87.2 (1992) 145 / full text
  • E. M. Craik, “Language of Sexuality and Sexual Inversion in Euripides’ Hippolytus,” Acta Classica 41 (1998) 29-44
  • A. Dalby, “Food and Sexuality in Classical Greece,” Food, Culture and History 1 (1993) 165-90
  • James Davidson, Courtesans and Fishcakes: The Consuming Passions of Classical Athens (1998)
  • Davidson, James N., “Dover, Foucault and Greek Homosexuality: Penetration and the Truth of Sex,” Past & Present: A Journal of Historical Studies 170, Oxford (2001) 3-51
  • L. Dean-Jones, “The Politics of Pleasure: Female Sexual Appetite in the Hippocratic Corpus,” Helios 19 (1992) 72-91
  • K. J. Dover, Greek Homosexuality: Harvard University Press (1978) / web link
  • K. J. Dover, “Classical Greek Attitudes to Sexual Behavior,” Arethusa 6 (1973) 59-74 [Directly available at http://www.blackwellpublishers.co.uk/images/Content_store/Sample_chapter/0631225889/001.zip] / web link
  • E. Fantham, “Sex, Status, and Survival in Hellenistic Athens: A Study of Women in New Comedy,” Phoenix 29 (1975) 44-74
  • Christopher A. Faraone, Ancient Greek Love Magic, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press (1999) / bmcr
  • Gloria Ferrari, Figures of Speech: Men and Maidens in Ancient Greece, Chicago : The University of Chicago Press (2002) [ISBN 0-226-22436-9] / bmcr
  • J. Finnis, “‘Shameless Acts’ in Colorado: Abuse of Scholarship in Constitutional Cases,” Academic Questions 7.4 (1994) 10-41 [see also Gerard V. Bradley “The Case of Martha Nussbaum” in a series of essays on “Fraud in Research” in Society March/April 1994]
  • Lin Foxhall, “Pandora Unbound: A Feminist Critique of Foucault’s History of Sexuality,” in Dislocating Masculinity: Comparative Ethnographies edited by A. Cornwall and N. Lindisfarne, London: Routledge (1994)
  • Kathy L. Gaca, “Driving Aphrodite from the World: Tatian’s Encratite Principles of Sexual Renunciation,” JThS 53 no. 1 (2002) 28-52
  • Gaca, Kathy L., The Making of Fornication. Eros, Ethics, and Political Reform in Greek Philosophy and Early Christianity. Hellenistic Culture and Society, 40, Berkeley: University of California Press (2003) [ISBN 0-520-23599-1]
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  • Golden, M., “Slavery and Homosexuality at Athens,” Phoenix 38 (1984) 308-324
  • S. Goldhill, Foucault’s Virginity: Ancient Erotic Fiction and the History of Sexuality, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1995) / bmcr
  • D. Halperin, “Questions of Evidence: Commentary on Koehl, DeVries, and Williams,” in Queer Representations: Reading Lives, Reading Cultures edited by Martin Duberman, New York: New York University Press (1997) 39-54
  • D. M. Halperin, “The Democratic Body,” in One Hundred Years Of Homosexuality: and Other Essays on Greek Love, New York and London: Routledge (1990) / bmcr
  • David Halperin, “Homosexuality,” in The Oxford Classical Dictionary. Third Edition edited by Simon Hornblower and Antony Spawforth, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press (1996) 720-723
  • David M. Halperin, One Hundred Years Of Homosexuality: and Other Essays on Greek Love, New York and London: Routledge (1990) / bmcr
  • David M. Halperin, How to Do the History of Homosexuality, Chicago (2002) [ISBN 0-226-31447-2] / bmcr
  • Paul Halsall, People with a History: An Online Guide to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Trans History / web link
  • Debra Hamel, Trying Neaira: The True Story of a Courtesan’s Scandalous Life in Ancient Greece , New Haven: Yale University Press (2003) [ISBN: 0300094310] / web link  / bmcr
  • E. M. Harris, “Did the Athenians Regard Seduction as a Worse Crime than Rape?,” Classical Quarterly 40 (1990) 370-377 / full text
  • Edward Harris, “Review-discussion of Deacy and Peirce, Rape in Antiquity: Sexual Violence in the Greek and Roman Worlds,” EMC/CV no. 40 (16) (1998) 483-496
  • C. Hindley, “Eros and Military Command in Xenophon,” Classical Quarterly 44.2 (1994) 347 / full text
  • C. Hindley, “Xenophon on male love,” The Classical Quarterly 49.1 (1999) 74-99
  • Philip Holt, “Sex, Tyranny, and Hippias’ Incest Dream (Herodotos 6.107),” GRBS 39 no. 3 (1998) 221-242
  • Richard W. Hooper, The Priapus Poems, Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press (1999) / bmcr
  • J. Samuel Houser, “Eros and Aphrodisia in the Works of Dio Chrysostom ,” Classical Antiquity 29 (1998) / web link
  • Thomas K. Hubbard, “Popular Perceptions of Elite Homosexuality in Classical Athens,” Arion 6.1 (1998) 48-78
  • Hubbard, Thomas K., “Pindar, Theoxenus, and the Homoerotic Eye,” Arethusa 35.2 (2002) 255-296
  • Hubbard, Thomas K., Homosexuality in Greece and Rome. A Sourcebook of Basic Documents, Berkeley: University of California Press (2003) [ISBN 0-520-23430-8] / bmcr
  • W. A. Percy III, Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece: University of Illinois Press (1996)
  • Johns, Catherine, Sex or Symbol: Erotic Images of Greece and Rome, Austin, Tex (1982)
  • Jordan, D.R., “Greek verses from Stabiae,” Zeitschrift f�r Papyrologie und Epigraphik 111 (1996) 124 [An arguably metrical graffito (1st cent. CE?) claiming that no man ought to enjoy sex with a woman if he himself was not anally penetrated when “kalos.”]
  • M. A. Katz, “Sexuality and the Body in Ancient Greece,” Metis. Revue d’anthropologie du monde grec ancien 4 (1989) 97-125
  • M. Kilmer, “Sexual Violence. Archaic Athens and the Recent Past,” in Owls to Athens. Essays on Classical Subjects in Honor of Sir Kenneth Dover edited by E. M. Craik (1990) 261-277
  • M. L. Kilmer, Greek Erotica on Attic Red Figure Vases (1993) / bmcr
  • M. L. Kilmer, “Genital Phobia and Depilation,” Journal of Hellenic Studies 102 (1982) 104-112 / web link  / full text
  • D. Konstan, “Love in the Ancient Greek Novel,” Epistula Zimbabweana 27 (1993) 5-15
  • D. Konstan, “Premarital Sex, Illegitimacy, and Male Anxiety in Menander and Athens,” in Athenian Identity and Civic Ideology edited by A. L. Boegehold and A. Scafuro, Baltimore (1994) / bmcr
  • Matthew Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch. Masculinity, Gender Ambiguity, and Christian Theology in Late Antiquity, Chicago: University of Chicago Press (2001) [ISBN 0-226-45739-7] / bmcr
  • Matthew Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch. Masculinity, Gender Ambiguity, and Christian Theology in Late Antiquity, Chicago: University of Chicago Press (2001) / bmcr
  • L. Kurke, “Pindar and the Prostitutes, or Reading Ancient ‘Pornography’,” Arion 4.2 (1996) 49-75
  • L. Kurke, “Inventing the Hetaira: Sex, Politics, and Discursive Conflict in Archaic Greece,” Classical Antiquity 16.1 (1997) 106-150 / pdf
  • M. Lambert and H. Szesnat, “Greek Homosexuality: Whither the Debate?,” Akroterion 39.2 (1994) 46-63
  • David H. J. Larmour, Paul Allen Miller and Charles Platter, Rethinking Sexuality: Foucault and Classical Antiquity, Princeton: Princeton University Press (1997) [The essays include “Situating The History of Sexuality” (the editors), “Taking the Sex Out of Sexuality: Foucault’s Failed History” (Joel Black), “Incipit Philosophia” (Alain Vizier), “The Subject in Antiquity after Foucault” (Page duBois), “This Myth Which Is Not One: Construction of Discourse in Plato’s Symposium” (Jeffrey S. Carnes), “Foucault’s History of Sexuality: A Useful Theory for Women?” (Amy Richlin), “Catullan Consciousness, the ‘Care of the Self,’ and the Force of the Negative in History” (Paul Allen Miller), “Reversals of Platonic Love in Petronius’ Satyricon” (Daniel B. McGlathery), and an essay from Dislocating Masculinity (Lin Foxhall).] / bmcr
  • B. M. Lavelle, “The Nature of Hipparchos’ Insult to Harmodios,” American Journal of Philology 107 (1986) 318-331 / full text
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  • H. Licht, Sexual Life in Ancient Greece (1949/2001) [“Professor Hans Licht, in this erudite and fascinating book, discusses in full every aspect of the Ancient GreeksB4 sexual life. Through literary, historical and artistic evidence, he presents an accurate, detailed picture of the position of women in Greek life, the erotic element in Greek religion and literature, the institutions of prostitution and make homosexuality and the more arcane sexual deviations indulged in by the Greeks. Particularly intriguing is his discussion of the Hetairae, female prostitutes who offered intellectual as well as sensual stimulation to their clients.”]
  • Robert J. Littman, “The Loves of Alcibiades,” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 101 (1970) 263-276 / full text
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  • Ludwig, Paul W., “Politics and Eros in Aristophanes’ Speech: Symposium 191E-192C and the Comedies ,” American Journal of Philology 117.4 (1996) / pdf
  • Laura McClure, Sexuality and Gender in the Classical World: Blackwell Publishers (2002) [1. Editor’s Introduction: Laura McClure. Part I: Greece: 2. Classical Attitudes to Sexual Behaviour: K. J. Dover. Excerpt:: Aristophanes’ Speech from Plato, Symposium 189d7-192a1. 3. Double-Consciousness in Sappho’s Lyrics: J. J. Winkler. Excerpt:s: Sappho 1 and 31; Homer, Iliad 5.114-132; Odyssey 6.139-85. 4. Bound to Bleed: Artemis and Greek Women: H. King. Excerpts: Hippocrates, On Unmarried Girls; Euripides, Hippolytus 59-105. 5. Playing the Other: Theater, Theatricality, and the Feminine in Greek Drama: F. Zeitlin. Excerpts: Sophocles, Women of Trachis 531-587, 1046-1084; Euripides, Bacchae 912-944. Part II: Rome: 6. The Silent Women of Rome: M. I. Finley. Excerpts: Funerary Inscriptions: CE 81.1-2, 158.2, 843, 1136.3-4; ILS 5213, 8402, 8394; CIL 1.1211, 1.1221, 1.1837. 7. The Body Female and the Body Politic: Livy’s Lucretia and Verginia: S. R. Joshel. Excerpts: Livy, On the Founding of Rome, 1.57.6-59.6. 8. Mistress and Metaphor in Augustan Elegy: M. Wyke. Excerpts: Propertius, 1.8a-b and 2.5; Cicero, In Defense of Marcus Caelius 20.47-21.50. 9. Pliny’s Brassiere. Excerpt:: Pliny, Natural History 28.70-82. Part III: Classical Tradition: 10. “The Voice of the Shuttle Is Ours.” P. K. Joplin. Excerpt: Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.424-623.] / bmcr
  • James F. McGlew, “Politics on the Margins: Athenian Hetaireiai in 415 B.C.,” Historia 48 no. 1 (1999) 1-22
  • D. Montserrat, Sex and society in Graeco-Roman Egypt, London: Kegan Paul (1996) / bmcr
  • Nigel Nicholson, “Pederastic Poets and Adult Patrons in Late Archaic Lyric,” CW 93 no. 3 (2000) 235-259
  • M. C. Nussbaum, “Platonic Love and Colorado Law: The Relevance of Ancient Greek Norms to Modern Sexual Controversies,” Virginia Law Review 80.7 (October, 1994) 1515-1651
  • Martha C. Nussbaum, “Platonic Love and Colorado Love: The Relevance of Ancient Greek Norms to Modern Sexual Controversies,” in The Greeks and Us: Essays in Honor of Arthur W. H. Adkins edited by Louden, Robert B. and Paul Schollmeier, Chicago (1996)
  • Rosanna Omitowoju, Rape and the Politics of Consent in Classical Athens, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2002) / bmcr
  • Holt Parker, “The Myth of the Heterosexual: Anthropology and Sexuality for Classicists,” Arethusa 34.3 (2001) / web link
  • Parker, Holt N., “Heterosexuality,” in The Oxford Classical Dictionary edited by Simon Hornblower and Antony Spawforth, Oxford: Oxford University Press (1996) 702-703 [Reprinted in Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization, ed. Simon Hornblower and Antony Spawforth. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. 342-43]
  • 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
  • Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz and Lisa Auanger, Among Women: From the Homosocial to the Homoerotic in the Ancient World: University of Texas Press (2002) [Introduction (Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz); Imag(in)ing a Women’s World in Bronze Age Greece: The Frescoes from Xeste 3 at Akrotiri, Thera (Paul Rehak); Aphrodite Garlanded: Erts and Poetic Creativity in Sappho and Nossis (Marilyn B. Skinner); Subjects, Objects, and Erotic Symmetry in Sappho’s Fragments (Ellen Greene); Excavating Female Homoeroticism in Ancient Greece: The Evidence from Attic Vase Painting (Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz); Women in Relief: “Double Consciousness” in Classical Attic Tombstones (John G. Younger); Glimpses through a Window: An Approach to Roman Female Homoeroticism through Art Historical and Literary Evidence (Lisa Auanger); Ovid’s Iphis and Ianthe: When Girls Won’t Be Girls (Diane T. Pintabone); Lucian’s “Leaena and Clonarium”: Voyeurism or a Challenge to Assumptions? (Shelley P. Haley); “Friendship and Physical Desire”: The Discourse of Female Homoeroticism in Fifth-Century CE Egypt (Terry G. Wilfong) ]
  • J. D. Reed, “The Sexuality of Adonis,” Classical Antiquity 14.2 (1995) 317ff.
  • A. Richlin, Pornography and Representation in Greece and Rome, Oxford (1991) / bmcr
  • Rousselle, Aline, Porneia: On Desire and the Body in Antiquity, Oxford (1988)
  • J. Roy, “An alternative sexual morality for classical Athens,” Greece & Rome 44 no. 1 (1997) 11-22 / full text
  • Scafuro, Adele C., The forensic stage : settling disputes in Graeco-Roman New Comedy: Cambridge University Press (1997) [Chapter 5: Redress for sexual offenses in Athenian and Roman law; Chapter 6: The resolution of seduction and rape in New Comedy; Appendix 7: Moikhos and moikheia] / bmcr
  • B. Sergent, Homosexuality in Greek Myth (1986)
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  • H. A. Shapiro, “Courtship Scenes in Attic Vase-Painting,” American Journal of Archaeology 85 (1981) / full text
  • Siems, Andreas Karsten, Sexualität und Erotik in der Antike, Darmstadt (1988)
  • Sissa, Giulia, Greek Virginity, Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP (1990)
  • Marilyn B. Skinner, “Zeus and Leda: The Sexuality Wars in Contemporary Classical Scholarship,” Thamyris 3.1 (1996) 103-123 / web link
  • 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
  • John Thorp, “The Social Construction of Homosexuality,” Phoenix 46.1 (1992) / web link
  • Michael Weiss, “Erotica: On the Prehistory of Greek Desire,” HSPh 98 (1998) 31-62 / full text
  • T. Wick, “The Importance of the Family as a Determiner of Sexual Mores in Classical Athens,” Societas 5.2 (1975) 133-145
  • D. Wiles, “Marriage and Prostitution in Classical New Comedy,” Themes in Drama 11 (1989) 31-48
  • Wilhelm, James J., Gay and Lesbian Poetry: An Anthology from Sappho to Michelangelo, New York and London: Garland (1995) / bmcr
  • Williams, Craig A., “Greek Love at Rome,” Classical Quarterly 45 (1995) 517-539 / full text
  • Williams, Craig A., Roman Homosexuality: Ideologies of Masculinity in Classical Antiquity, Oxford: Oxford University Press (1999) / bmcr  / bmcr  / web link
  • Victoria Wohl, “The Eros of Alcibiades,” Classical Antiquity 30 (1999) / web link
  • Maria Wyke, Parchments of gender: deciphering the bodies of antiquity, Oxford: Clarendon Press (1998) [Introduction Maria Wyke; 1. Ithyphallic Males Behaving Badly; or, Satyr Drama as Gendered Tragic Ending Edith Hall; 2. `The Mother of the Argument’: Eros and the Body in Sappho and Plato’s Phaedrus Helene P. Foley; 3. Talking Recipes in the Gynaecological Texts of the Hippocratic Corpus Ann Ellis Hanson; 4. Controlling Daughters’ Bodies in Sirach Jon L. Berquist; 5. Austerity, Excess, Success, and Failure in Hellenistic and Early Imperial Italy Emma Dench; 6. Poisonous Women and Unnatural History in Roman Culture Sarah Currie; 7. Discovering the Body in Roman Oratory Erik Gunderson; 8. The Emperor’s New Body: Ascension from Rome Mary Beard John Henderson; 9. `Ordering the House’: On the Domestication of Jewish Bodies Cynthia M. Baker; 10. Playing Roman Soldiers: The Martyred Body, Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane, and the Representation of Male Homosexuality Maria Wyke; 11. Sowing the Seeds of Violence: Rape, Women, and the Land Carol Dougherty ] / web link
  • Maria Wyke, The Roman Mistress: Ancient and Modern Representations., Oxford: Oxford University Press (2002) [1. Part 1. Love Poetry Mistress and Metaphor in Augustan Elegy; 2. Written Women: Propertius’ scripta puella (2. 10-13); 3. The Elegiac Woman at Rome: Propertius Book 4; 4. Reading Female Flesh: Ovid Amores 3. 1; 5. Part 2. Reception Taking the Woman’s Part: Gender and Scholarship on Love Elegy; 6. Meretrix regina: Augustan Cleopatras; 7. Oriental Vamp; Cleopatra 1910s; 8. Glamour Girl: Cleopatra 1930s – 1960s; 9. Meretrix Augusta: Messalina 1870s – 1920s; 10. Suburban Feminist: Messalina 1930s – 1970s] / bmcr
  • John G. Younger, “Gender and Sexuality in the Parthenon Frieze,” in Naked Truths: Women, Sexuality and Gender in Classical Art and Archaeology edited by Ann Olga Koloski-Ostrow and Claire L. Lyons, London: Routledge (1997) / web link  / bmcr