- Anasyrma
Anasyrma (plural: anasyrmata), also called anasyrmos, [Blackledge, C. (2003). "The Story of V: A Natural History of Female Sexuality". New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. 12.] is the
gesture of lifting up theskirt orkilt . It is used in connection with certain religiousritual s, eroticism, and lewd jokes, see e.g.Baubo . The term is used in describing corresponding works ofart . Anasyrma differs from flashing, a physically similar gesture as an act ofexhibitionism , in that an exhibitionist has an implied purpose of his/her own sexual arousal, while anasyrma is only done for the effect on the onlookers.Anasyrma may be a deliberately provocative self-exposing of one's naked
genitals and/orbuttocks . The famous example of the latter case isAphrodite Kallipygos ("Aphrodite beautiful buttocks"). In many traditions this gesture also has an apotropaic character, as a mockery towards a supernatural enemy analogous tomooning .Greek antiquity
Ritual jesting and obscenity were common in the cults of
Demeter andDionysus , and figure in the celebration of theEleusinian mysteries associated with these divinities. The mythographer Apollodorus says that Iambe's jesting was the reason for the practice of ritual jesting at theThesmophoria , a festival celebrated in honor of Demeter and Persephone, but in other versions of the myth of Demeter, the goddess is received by a woman named Baubo, who makes her laugh by exposing herself, in a ritual gesture called anasyrma ("lifting up [of skirts] "). A set of statuettes fromPriene , a Greek city on the east coast of Asia Minor, are usually identified as "Baubo" figurines, representing the female body as the face conflated with the lower part of the abdomen, much like thephallus es decorated with eyes, mouth, and sometimes also legs that appear on vase paintings and also as statuettes.References
ee also
*
Indecent exposure
*Exhibitionism (martymachlia)
*Mooning
*Upskirt ources
* [http://mkatz.web.wesleyan.edu/cciv110x/hhdemeter/cciv110.back.demeter.html Wesleyan.edu - Homeric hymn to Demeter] .
*Weber-Lehmann, C. (1997 (2000)) "Anasyrma und Götterhochzeit. Ein orientalisches Motiv im nacharchaischen Etrurien", in: "Akten des Kolloquiums zum Thema: Der Orient und Etrurien. Zum Phänomen des 'Orientalisierens' im westlichen Mittelmeerraum". Tübingen.Further reading
*Hairston, Julia L. (Autumn 2000) Skirting the Issue: Machiavelli's Caterina Sforza. "Renaissance Quarterly." Vol. 53, No. 3. pp. 687-712.
*Marcovich, M. (September 1986) Demeter, Baubo, Iacchus, and a Redactor. "Vigiliae Christianae." Vol. 40, No. 3. pp. 294-301.
*Säflund, Gösta. (1963) Aphrodite Kallipygos. Almqvist & Wiksell, Stockholm, Sweden.
*Stoichita, Victor I.; Anna Maria Coderch. (1999) Goya: The Last Carnival. Reaktion Books. pp. 118. ISBN: 1861890451
*Thomson De Grummond, Nancy. (2006) Etruscan Myth, Sacred History, and Legend. UPenn Museum of Archaeology. ISBN: 1931707863
*Zeitlin, Robert N. (1982) Cultic models of the female: Rites of Dionysos and Demeter, Arethusa. pp. 144-145.
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