Beginning with Diodorus Siculus's first-century BCE account and extending to early modern German Meisterlieder, this book explores the plethora of narratives about the ancient Babylonian queen Semiramis. The selected texts, most from continental Europe, cover a range of genres and languages. Organized thematically around issues of visual communication -- acts of seeing and being seen -- this study highlights the narrative fluidity in the matière de Sémiramide, ultimately revealing a figure of excess and surplus that defies classification and categorization. In its thematic focus, this study also draws on the competitive yet complementary relationship between the visual and the verbal.
Alison L. Beringer holds the M.A. in Classics from the University of Victoria and the Ph.D. in German from Princeton University. She specializes in German literature of the late Middle Ages; her research interests include manuscript studies, the reception of antiquity, and women's and gender studies. In addition to holding academic teaching positions, Dr. Beringer served for two years as Reader at Princeton University's Index of Christian Art. She is currently Associate Professor of Classics and Humanities at Montclair State University.