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Description
A gripping new journey through ancient history, uncovering the origins of homophobia and the untold stories of those who dared to love.
In the early days of ancient Greece, queer love was celebrated. The most famous warrior in antiquity loved another man, the poet whose lyrics were memorised by philosophers and kings sang of her desire for women. Men could swear oaths of undying love and live out the rest of their lives together in peace. What fragments survive of this ancient world all tell us one thing: it was not a sin to be queer.
In this extraordinary book, Harry Tanner sets out on a journey to discover the origins of homophobia in the West. From the rise of belligerent tyrants to civil unrest and the birth of radical new philosophies, Tanner follows the traces of this sinister idea as it swept across the ancient Mediterranean. Wherever he discovers the roots of homophobia taking hold, from ancient Judea to imperial Rome, Tanner finds a confluence of crises mirrored across the centuries. Inequality, fear and an obsession with self-control – this is how societies turn on their queer citizens, time and time again, since the dawn of history.
This is a powerful story that draws on the rich world of the ancients to reveal how homophobia infected Western religion and ideology - the consequences of which we are still living with today - and to that end how we can move forward and resist homophobia in the future.
Product details
Published | Sep 25 2025 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 272 |
ISBN | 9781399422338 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Continuum |
Illustrations | Approx 5 black and white integrated images throughout |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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"An extremely compelling proposition which asks, with personal urgency, how a religion of love can also - somehow - end up as a religion of pain.”
Alain de Botton
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In this polemical tour de force, Harry Tanner shows how the phenomenon of homophobia can be linked to social conditions in historical societies, presenting the case with brilliant verve and scholarship. Readable and thought-provoking in equal measure.
Professor Armand d'Angour (author of Socrates in Love and Professor of Classics at Oxford University)