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VIRTUAL - Anatomy as Religion: The Body in Ancient Italian Votive Practice

April 13, 2021 @ 2:00 pm EDT Central Time

This is an online event.



Lecturer: Rebecca Flemming

Tens of thousands of votive objects, mostly in terracotta, survive from religious sanctuaries across Republican central Italy (from the fourth to the first centuries BC). Many are in the shape of body parts, external and internal, single and multiple, even displayed within a whole human torso or figure, and they are usually interpreted as representing engagements with the divine about health and healing, broadly construed. They offer key insights into both religion in early Italy and ideas about the human body. This lecture first offers an overview of the extant material and the cult practice, the address and thanks to the gods, that these artefacts embody, summarizing both recent finds and new scholarship on the phenomenon of the anatomical ex-voto. The focus then turns to the ‘polyviscera’, the objects which depict multiple organs, in a range of presentational styles, and to the meanings they might have, both in terms of the ways the human body was understood in antiquity, and the ways divinities might be invited to intervene in it.

Short bibliography and/or website on lecture topic:

Jane Draycott and E.-J. Graham (eds), Bodies of Evidence: Ancient Anatomical Votives Past, Present and Future (London, 2017),

Jessica Hughes, Votive Body Parts in Greek and Roman Religion (Cambridge, 2017)

The Votives Project (https://thevotivesproject.org/)

Joukowsky Lecture

Please contact Nicolle Hirschfeld at nhirschf@trinity.edu for the Zoom link and passcode.

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Details

Date:
April 13, 2021
Time:
2:00 pm EDT
Event Category:

Contact

Nicolle Hirschfeld
Email
nhirschf@trinity.edu

Other

In-person or Virtual Event
Virtual
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