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				First published: November 1, 2025 - Last updated: November 1, 2025
			TITLE INFORMATION 
			
			Author: A. Everett Beek
			
 Title: Rape and the Word Paelex
 
 Subtitle: Agency and Opprobrium
 
 Journal: Classical Philology: A Journal Devoted to Research in Classical Antiquity
 
 Volume: 120
 
 Issue: 4
 
 Year: October 2025
 
 Pages: 451-469
 
 pISSN: 0009-837X - 
				Find a Library: WorldCat | 
			eISSN: 1546-072X - 
				Find a Library: WorldCat
 
 Language: English
 
 Keywords: 
				Ancient History: 
					Roman History | 
				Types: 
					Rape; 
				Society: 
					Rape Culture / 
						Conceptual History; 
				Representations: 
					Literary Texts / 
						Ovid
 
 FULL TEXT
 
			
			Link:
			University of Chicago Press (Restricted Access)
			 
 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
			
			Author:
				A. Everett Beek, 
					Department of Classics, 
					Case Western Reserve University
			
 Abstract: 
				»This paper examines the literary use of the Latin word paelex, which describes someone who has sex with a married man but is not married to him (typically implying a competitive relationship between the man’s partners, emphasizing the wife’s superior status). A paelex is imagined as someone with destructive power, who would destroy a stable relationship and harm the wife, but more often the wife is the one exercising power against the paelex. In Ovid’s works paelex is weaponized against rape victims, to cast their rapes as adulterous affairs and suggest they deserve opprobrium, with repercussions in modern rape culture.« 
				(Source: Classical Philology)
 
 Wikipedia: 
				Ancient history: 
					Ancient Rome | 
				Law: 
					Roman law / 
						Concubinatus | 
				Literature: 
					Latin literature / 
						Ovid | 
				Sex and the law: 
					Rape / 
						History of rape
 |