Hesperia

Early Corinthian Jointed Dolls: Context, Meaning, and Diffusion

by Susan Langdon

Hesperia, Volume 93, Issue 2
Page(s): 251-335
Stable URL: https://muse.jhu.edu/article/929938
Year: 2024
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ABSTRACT:

Of the many innovations made by Corinthian coroplasts, the most distinctive may be the Classical-period jointed dolls. Scholarship connects the nude figures with the rituals of girls’ maturation and preparation for marriage. Largely overlooked are jointed dolls in chitoniskos and polos, presumed forerunners of the nudes. Over 40 specimens excavated at the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore on Acrocorinth offer an opportunity to understand the development of dolls within their Corinthian religious and social setting. This investigation reveals a dozen Archaizing types and tracks their dissemination across the Greekspeaking world. Far from a brief prelude to Classical dolls, the early figurines bear witness to cult developments and previously undetected rituals in Corinth.