The Wound and the Witness: The Rhetoric of Torture

The Wound and the Witness: The Rhetoric of Torture

by Jennifer R. Ballengee
The Wound and the Witness: The Rhetoric of Torture

The Wound and the Witness: The Rhetoric of Torture

by Jennifer R. Ballengee

eBook

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Overview

The Wound and the Witness offers a historically grounded approach to an urgent contemporary problem: the persistence of torture in Western culture. Drawing upon ancient Greek and Roman texts, as well as contemporary media events, Jennifer R. Ballengee explores the spectacle of torture as a persuasive device. She suggests that both torture and the witnessing of torture are forms of polemical writing, carried out on the body. The analysis combines close reading and philological study with a materialist cultural approach to ancient Greek theater, early Christian accounts of martyrdom, and recent political controversies over the interrogation tactics in the U.S. government-run Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib prisons. By incorporating key classical texts by Sophocles, Achilles Tatius, and Prudentius, the author demonstrates how deeply the ancient literature resonates with contemporary issues of the body, rhetoric, and the spectacle of pain.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438425115
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 01/21/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 700 KB

About the Author

Jennifer R. Ballengee is Associate Professor of English and Director of Cultural Studies at Towson University.

Table of Contents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

INTRODUCTION

1. The Legal Body:The Symbolic Corpse in Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus and Antigone

2. The Political Body:Pain and Punishment in Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex and Oedipus at Colonus

3. The Erotic Body:Mutilation and Desire in Achilles Tatius’s Leukippe and Kleitophon

4. The Moral Body:The Figure of Suffering in Prudentius’s Peristephanon Liber

EPILOGUE
Pain and Public Opinion: The Rhetoric of Torture and the Media

NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
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