Comic Sex and ‘Fragmentary Thinking’: Damoxenus, Fr. 3 Pcg

Classical Quarterly 72 (1):191-201 (2022)
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Abstract

Our extant texts never give a fully comprehensive or representative impression of classical literature. Fragments are valuable because they tell—or hint at—a different story. They represent vestigial traces of a counterfactual alternative version of literary history, and they offer tantalizing glimpses of voices or varieties of human experience that were (accidentally or deliberately) excluded from the classical canon. To ‘think fragmentarily’ is to think beyond the canon and to question traditionally dominant modes of thought. This article uses a neglected fragment of Damoxenus (fr. 3 PCG) as a case study for ‘fragmentary thinking’. This extraordinary fragment reveals that Damoxenus’ comedy dramatized a homosexual love story, in sharp contrast to the familiar heteronormative marriage plots of Menander and other Greek and Roman comic playwrights. Careful examination of a single fragment can prompt us to re-examine conventional scholarly narratives of sexuality in New Comedy.

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References found in this work

Love and Marriage in Greek New Comedy.P. G. McC Brown - 1993 - Classical Quarterly 43 (1):189-205.
Menanders Menschen als Polisbürger.Kurt Treu - 1981 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 125 (1-2):211-214.
Love and Marriage in Greek New Comedy.P. G. McC - 1993 - Classical Quarterly 43 (1):189-205.
The Dyskolos of Menander.Robert K. Sherk & E. W. Handley - 1967 - American Journal of Philology 88 (4):469.

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