Horror in Classical Antiquity and Beyond: Body, Affect, Concepts
By (Author) Chiara Thumiger
Edited by George Kazantzidis
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
20th March 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Ancient, classical and medieval texts
Psychology
880.09
Hardback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This open-access volume is the first to explore systematically and comprehensively the concept and category of horror in antiquity. The contributors retrieve the ancient grammar of horror by paying equal attention to its affective and cognitive dimensions, and by looking at it as an embodied, enactive and full-rounded existential experience. They explore how horrifying experiences in antiquity are construed as embodied events while being conceptually rooted in cultural frameworks. They also showcase the ways in which the body itself can turn into a source of deep horror, be it in literary or medical texts and traditions in the Greek and Roman world, from the classical period to late antiquity. While maintaining a firm awareness of the fact that horror, a largely post-Romantic concept, is not unproblematic when applied to Graeco-Roman antiquity, this collection of studies shows that our Graeco-Roman past can shed substantial light on the ways in which the horrific is understood today, as a category of art but also of life itself. The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Kiel University.
This is a wide-ranging collection, dealing with many different aspects of how people might have experienced the emotion of horror in antiquity. Students and scholars with interests in this area will find something of value in these pages. -- Tony Keen, Adjunct Associate Professor, University of Notre Dame (USA), UK
George Kazantzidis is Associate Professor of Latin at the University of Patras, Greece. He is author of Lucretius on Disease: The Poetics of Morbidity in De rerum natura (2021), and co-editor of Body and Machine in Classical Antiquity (2023) and Medical Understandings of Emotions in Antiquity (2022). Chiara Thumiger is Research Fellow within the Cluster of Excellence Roots at Kiel University, Germany, and Guest Research Fellow at Humboldt University, Berlin. She is author of Phrenitis and the Pathology of the Mind in Western Medical Thought (2023), A History of the Mind and Mental Health in Classical Greek Medical Thought (2017) and Hidden Paths: Notions of Self, Tragic Characterization: Euripides Bacchae (2007).