In the Sept. 24, 2009 issue of the
NY Review of Books, G.W. Bowerstock makes a strong and shocking case for the ancient Greeks' widespread toleration of the sexual molestation of boys by adult males. (As Bowerstock points out, we owe the word 'pederasty' for this activity to the Greek
pais for boy and
erastês for lover). While Mr. Bowerstock concealed his own sympathies for most of his book review, he seems to have revealed them in his conclusion and this became a subject for a letter to the editor by this writer. His review ("Men and Boys") was of the following two books:
The Greeks and Greek Love: A Bold New Exploration of the Ancient World, by James Davidson, Random House, 789 pp., $45.00. Images of Ancient Greek Pederasty: Boys Were Their Gods, by Andrew Lear and Eva Cantarella, Routledge, 262 pp., $41.95.
Here is the (as yet unpublished) letter I submitted in response:
To the Editor of the New York Review of Books
G.W. Bowersock concludes his review of the history and artifacts of ancient Greek pederasty with the statement: "The sexual life of the ancient Greeks was as variegated and inventive as its resplendent culture...To this day it stubbornly resists all modern ideologies and prejudices, and yet it had its own principles of decency."
In addition to the molestation of boys, the Greeks also practiced slavery. Can anyone imagine referring to slavery as "stubbornly resisting modern ideologies and prejudices" and possessed of its own "decency"?
Is it a "prejudice" to view the sexual molestation of youth as abhorrent, and to regard the term "decency" in connection with it as a grotesque - if not depraved - whitewash of this predation?
Michael Hoffman
***
"Sexual Life in Ancient Greece" by Licht is also worth reading.
ReplyDeleteDear Mr Mason
ReplyDeleteHave you read Bowerstock or James Davidson; or Lear and Cantarella? Or is yours a case of don't confuse me with the facts?
The ancient Greek nation discussed in works by these authors tolerated pederasty, i.e. the adult male predation of boys.
Should we fear and denounce the truth, as rabbis do?
The virtue of our heritage is the willingness to face the facts. The betrayal is to flee from them.