Power and Eroticism in Imperial Rome

The relationships between Roman emperors and their objects of desire, male and female, are well attested. The salacious nature of this evidence means that it is often omitted from mainstream historical inquiry. Yet that is to underestimate the importance of \'gossip\' and the act of thinking about an emperor\'s private life. In this book Dr Vout takes the reader from Rome, and Martial\'s and Statius\' poems about Domitian\'s favourite eunuch, to Antioch and dialogues in praise of Lucius Verus\' mistress, to the widespread visual commemoration and cult of Hadrian\'s young male lover, Antinous. She explores not the relationships themselves but rather the implications of their description. Such description provides a template with which to examine the relationship between emperor and subject, gods and mortals, East and West, centre and periphery. It thus contributes to the fields of imperial representation, court society and the imperial cult.

• Adopts an interdisciplinary approach combining detailed analysis of visual and literary evidence • Contributes as much to an understanding of gender and sexuality in antiquity and the present as it does to Roman imperial history • Will appeal to those interested in the Roman Empire, Roman religion, Greek and Roman literature and gender and sexuality

Contents

1. The erotics of imperium; 2. Romancing the stone: the story of Hadrian and Antinous; 3. Compromising traditions: the case of Nero and Sporus; 4. A match made in heaven: Earinus and the emperor; 5. Mistress as metaphor: a dialogue with Panthea; 6. And so to bed...