With the Veil Removed: Women's Public Nudity in the Early Roman Empire

Classical Antiquity 38 (2):217-249 (2019)
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Abstract

This paper explores the dynamics of women's public nudity in the early Roman empire, centering particularly on two festival occasions—the rites of Venus Verticordia and Fortuna Virilis on April 1, and the Floralia in late April—and on the respective social and spatial contexts of those festivals: the baths and the theater. In the early empire, these two social spaces regularly remove or complicate some of the markers that divide Roman women by sociosexual status. The festivals and the ritual nudity within them focus attention on the negotiations of social boundaries within these spaces, and the occasions for cross-class identification among women they provide.

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References found in this work

The Latin Sexual Vocabulary.Amy Richlin & J. N. Adams - 1984 - American Journal of Philology 105 (4):491.
The Adultery Mime.R. W. Reynolds - 1946 - Classical Quarterly 40 (3-4):77-.
Stripping the Roman Ladies: Ovid's Rites and Readers.Ioannis Ziogas - 2014 - Classical Quarterly 64 (2):735-744.

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