Truth Contests and Talking Corpses

In James I. Porter (ed.), Constructions of the Classical Body. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press,. pp. 287-313 (1999)
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Abstract

In diverse fictions from the second century Roman Empire, two parties with competing claims to truth hold a formal contest in a public place where, after a series of abrupt reversals, the issue is finally decided by the evidence of a dead, mutilated, or resurrected body. We can ask these corpses to tell us about the ways Roman society constructed truth. Furthermore, can we learn from the abrupt reversals in these narratives anything about the way Romans experienced shifts in truth-paradigms in “real life”? (This is, of course, a question of paramount importance for appreciating the religious change propelled by Christianity).

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Maud Gleason
Stanford University

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