• 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
  • Julia M. Asher-Greve, “The Essential Body: Mesopotamian Conceptions of the Gendered Body,” Gender and History 9.3 (1997) 432-461
  • Zainab Bahrani, “The Hellenization of Ishtar: nudity, fetishism, and the production of cultural differentiation in ancient art,” The Oxford Art Journal 19.2 (1996) 3-16
  • Mary Beard and John Henderson, “With this Body I Thee Worship: Sacred Prostitution in Antiquity,” Gender and History 9.3 (1997) 480-503
  • Stephanie Boehm, Die ‘nackte Göttin’: zur Ikonographie und Deutung unbekleideter weiblicher Figuren in der frühgriechischen Kunst, Mainz am Rhein: Deutsches Archaeologisches Institut (1990)
  • Buckley, Jorunn J., “Libertines or Not: Fruit, Bread, Semen and Other Body Fluids in Gnosticism,” JECS 2 (1994) 15-31
  • Castelli, Elizabeth, “‘I Will Make Mary Male’: Pieties of the Body and Gender Transformation of Christian Women in Late Antiquity,” in Body Guards: The Cultural Politics of Gender Ambiguity edited by Julia Epstein and Kristina Staub, London: Routledge (1991) 29-49
  • C. A. Clark, “The Gendering of the Body in Alcman’s Partheneion 1: Narrative, Sex, and Social Order in Archaic Sparta,” Helios 23.2 (1996) 143-172
  • Christina Clark, “The Body of Desire: Nonverbal Communication in Sappho 31V,” Syllecta Classica 12 (2001) 1-32
  • Clarke, John R, Looking at Lovemaking in Roman Art: Constructions of Sexuality 100 B.C. to A.D. 250, Berkeley: University of California Press (1998) / bmcr  / web link
  • L. Dean-Jones, “The Cultural Construct of the Female Body in Classical Greek Science,” in Women’s History and Ancient History edited by S. Pomeroy, Chapel Hill, NC (1991) 111-137
  • L. Dean-Jones, Women’s Bodies in Classical Greek Science (1993) / bmcr
  • P. duBois, Sowing the Body: Psychoanalysis and Ancient Representations of Women, Chicago (1988)
  • Bruce N. Fisk, “PORNEYEIN as Body Violation: The Unique Nature of Sexual Sin in 1 Corinthians 6.18,” NTS 42 no. 4 (1996) 540 ff.
  • Judith Fletcher, “Sacrificial Bodies and the Body of the Text in Aristophanes’ Lysistrata,” Ramus: Critical Studies in Greek and Roman Literature 28.2 (1999) 108-125
  • Lin Foxhall and John Salmon (eds.), Thinking Men: Masculinity and its Self-Representation in the Classical Tradition, London and New York: Routledge (1998) [CONTENTS: Lin Foxhall, “Introduction” Matthew Fox, “The constrained man” Robin Osborne, “Sculpted men of Athens: masculinity and power in the field of vision” Emma J. Stafford, “Masculine values, feminine forms: on the gender of personified abstractions” Lin Foxhall, “Natural sex: the attribution of sex and gender to plants in ancient Greece” Margaret Williamson, “Eros the blacksmith: performing masculinity in Anakreon’s love lyrics” Richard Hawley, “The male body as spectacle in Attic drama” Alan H. Sommerstein, “Rape and young manhood in Athenian comedy” Angela Heap, “Understanding the men in Menander” Karen F. Pierce, “Ideals of masculinity in New Comedy” Jonathan Walters, “Juvenal, Satire 2: putting male sexual deviants on show” Mary Harlow, “In the name of the father: procreation, paternity and patriarchy” Gillian Clark, “The old Adam: the Fathers and the unmaking of masculinity” Felicity Rosslyn, “The hero of our time: classic heroes and post-classical drama” ] / bmcr  / bmcr
  • Lin Foxhall and John Salmon (eds.), When Men Were Men : Masculinity, Power and Identity in Classical Antiquity, London and New York: Routledge (1999) [Introduction (Lin Foxhall); A brief history of tears: gender differentiation in Archaic Greece (Hans Van Wees); The machismo of the Athenian Empire — or the reign of the phaulus? (Paul Cartledge); Violence, masculinity and the law in classical Athens (Nick Fisher); Sex and paternity: gendering the foundation of Kyrene (Eireann Marshall); The masculinity of the Hellenistic king (Jim Roy); Sexing a Roman: imperfect men in Roman law (Jane F. Gardner); Experiencing the male body in Roman Egypt (Dominic Montserrat); Imperial cult: engendering the cosmos (Susan Fischler); The cube and the sequare: masculinity and male social roles in Roman Boiotia (Jill Harries); ‘All that may become a man’: the bandit in the ancient novel (Keith Hopwood); Arms and the man: soldier, masculinity and power in Republican and Imperial Rome (Richard Alston) ]
  • 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]
  • M. Gustafson, “Inscripta in fronte: Penal Tattooing in Late Antiquity,” Classical Antiquity 16.1 (1997) 79-105
  • 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
  • Richard W. Hooper, The Priapus Poems, Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press (1999) / bmcr
  • Richard W. Hooper, “In Defence of Catullus’ Dirty Sparrow,” Greece & Rome 32.2 (1985) 162-178 / full text
  • Hunter, V., “Constructing the Body of the Citizen: Corporeal Punishment in Classical Athens,” Echos du monde classique 36 (1992) 271-91
  • Jones, C.P., “Stigma: Tattooing and Branding in Graeco-Roman Antiquity,” Journal of Roman Studies 77 (1987) 139-55 / full text
  • P. K. Joplin, “Ritual Work on Human Flesh: Livy’s Lucretia and the Rape of the Body Politic,” Helios 17 (1990) 51-70
  • M. A. Katz, “Sexuality and the Body in Ancient Greece,” Metis. Revue d’anthropologie du monde grec ancien 4 (1989) 97-125
  • Helen King, “Reading the Female Body,” Gender and History 9.3 (1997) 620-624
  • Helen King, Hippocrates’ Woman: Reading the Female Body in Ancient Greece : Routledge (1998) / bmcr
  • Konstan, D., “Aristophanes’ Lysistrata: Women and the Body Politic,” in Tragedy, Comedy, and the Polis edited by A. Sommerstein, S. Halliwell, J. Henderson and B. Zimmermann, Bari (1993)
  • T. Laquer, Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud, Cambridge, MA (1989) / web link
  • 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
  • Dominic Montserrat, Changing bodies, changing meanings: studies on the human body in antiquity, London: Routledge (1998) [Contributors: Angus Bowie, Gillian Clark, Richard Hawley, Lynn Meskell, Dominic Montserrat, Penelope Murray, Jane Stevenson, Nicholas Vlahogiannis, Terry Wilfong] / bmcr
  • H. N. Parker, “Love’s Body Anatomized: The Ancient Erotic Handbooks and the Rhetoric of Sexuality,” in Pornography and Representation in Greece and Rome edited by Amy Richlin, Oxford: Oxford UP (1991) 90-111 / bmcr
  • Paul Rehak, “The Aegean Landscape and the Body: A New Interpretation of the Thera Frescoes,” in From the Ground Up: Beyond Gender Theory in Archaeology. Proceedings of the Fifth Gender and Archaeology Conference, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, October 1998 British Archaeological Reports – International Series edited by N.L. Wicker and B. Arnold 812 (1999) 11-22
  • Joan Reilly, “Naked and Limbless: Learning about the Feminine Body in Ancient Athens,” 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
  • A. Rousselle, “Personal Status and Sexual Practice in the Roman Empire,” in Zone: Fragments for a History of the Human Body: Part Three edited by M. Feher 301-333
  • A. Rousselle, “Body Politics in Ancient Rome,” in A History of Women in the West: From Ancient Goddesses to Christian Saints edited by P. S. Pantel (1992) 296-336
  • Rousselle, Aline, Porneia: On Desire and the Body in Antiquity, Oxford (1988)
  • Thomas Scanlon, Eros and Greek Athletics, Oxford: Oxford University Press (2002) / bmcr
  • C. N. Seremetakis, Ritual, power and the body: historical perspectives on the representation of Greek women, New York: Pella (1993)
  • Sissa, Giulia, Greek Virginity, Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP (1990)
  • H. von Staden, “The Discovery of the Body: Human Dissection and its Cultural Contexts in Ancient Greece,” Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 65.3 (1992) 223-241
  • 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
  • Trimble, J. , “Replicating the body politic: the Herculaneum Women statue types in Early Imperial Italy,” JRA 13.1 (2000) 41-68
  • Walters, Jonathan, “Invading the Roman Body: Manliness and Impenetrability in Roman Thought,” in Roman Sexualities edited by Hallett, Judith P. and Skinner, Marilyn B., Princeton: Princeton University Press (1997) 29-43 / bmcr
  • N. Worman, “The Body as Argument: Helen in Four Greek Texts,” Classical Antiquity 16.1 (1997) 151ff.
  • 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
  • F. I. Zeitlin, “The Politics of Eros in the Danaid Trilogy of Aeschylus,” in Playing the Other: Gender and Society in Classical Greek Literature, Chicago: University of Chicago Press (1995) / bmcr
  • F. I. Zeitlin, “The Body’s Revenge: Dionysos and Tragic Action in Euripides’ Hekabe,” in Playing the Other: Gender and Society in Classical Greek Literature, Chicago: University of Chicago Press (1995) / bmcr