DisAbility, eunuchs and the lived experience in Ptolemaic-Roman Egypt
DisAbility, eunuchs and the lived experience in Ptolemaic-Roman Egypt
Within bioarchaeology and paleopathology, disability is commonly viewed from a modern medical model standpoint, but the field is intrinsically social in nature. People experience impairments differently. Medical papyri provide a view of the emic understanding and treatment of bodily difference in the Egyptian past, but this does not map directly either to etic modern understandings of bodily difference or to palaeopathologically identifiable skeletal impairment or difference. Following a social model, disability is a product of the lived, social environment. This paper uses the term “disAbility” in order to place explicit focus on personal agency and the ability to participate of the person affected by impairment. Even when using the disAbility approach, there is still a fluid boundary between disabled and non-disabled, with shading and gradations along the continuum of disAbility depending on the actions and activities of the individuals involved.
This paper uses fictive narrative (so-called “faction”) to explore the lives of people buried at the Ptolemaic and Roman site of Quesna. Located in the central-southern Delta of Egypt, the excavations of the Ptolemaic and Roman period necropolis have revealed the skeletal remains of 158 individuals including some with above average stature but unfused epiphyses. Should they be considered disabled?
disability, representation, life history, castration
Zakrzewski, Sonia
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Wright, Stephanie Susanne Evelyn
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Haddow, Scott
fb78414b-32db-46e8-a503-98f665ea671f
Zakrzewski, Sonia
d80afd94-feff-4fe8-96e9-f3db79bba99d
Wright, Stephanie Susanne Evelyn
18fe6548-1107-459f-87a0-5adc75fbf0ba
Haddow, Scott
fb78414b-32db-46e8-a503-98f665ea671f
Zakrzewski, Sonia, Wright, Stephanie Susanne Evelyn and Haddow, Scott
(2023)
DisAbility, eunuchs and the lived experience in Ptolemaic-Roman Egypt.
In,
Morris, Alexandra and Vogel, Hannah
(eds.)
Disability in Ancient Egypt and Egyptology: All Our Yesterdays.
Routledge.
(Submitted)
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Book Section
Abstract
Within bioarchaeology and paleopathology, disability is commonly viewed from a modern medical model standpoint, but the field is intrinsically social in nature. People experience impairments differently. Medical papyri provide a view of the emic understanding and treatment of bodily difference in the Egyptian past, but this does not map directly either to etic modern understandings of bodily difference or to palaeopathologically identifiable skeletal impairment or difference. Following a social model, disability is a product of the lived, social environment. This paper uses the term “disAbility” in order to place explicit focus on personal agency and the ability to participate of the person affected by impairment. Even when using the disAbility approach, there is still a fluid boundary between disabled and non-disabled, with shading and gradations along the continuum of disAbility depending on the actions and activities of the individuals involved.
This paper uses fictive narrative (so-called “faction”) to explore the lives of people buried at the Ptolemaic and Roman site of Quesna. Located in the central-southern Delta of Egypt, the excavations of the Ptolemaic and Roman period necropolis have revealed the skeletal remains of 158 individuals including some with above average stature but unfused epiphyses. Should they be considered disabled?
Text
Revised Zakrzewski Evelyn-Wright Haddow DisAbility Eunuchs Ptolemaic-Roman Egypt
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Submitted date: 26 May 2023
Keywords:
disability, representation, life history, castration
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 480270
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480270
PURE UUID: 4785cf84-27be-40ca-956f-90e4123e131c
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:14
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:57
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Contributors
Author:
Stephanie Susanne Evelyn Wright
Author:
Scott Haddow
Editor:
Alexandra Morris
Editor:
Hannah Vogel
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