Women's History and Ancient History.Women's History ''This article is about the history of women. For information on the field of historical study, see Gender history. Women's history is the history of female human beings. Rights and equality Women's rights refers to the social and human rights of women. and Ancient History. Edited by Sarah B. Pomeroy (Chapel Hill, North Carolina Chapel Hill is a town in North Carolina and the home of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-CH), the oldest state-supported university in the United States. As of the 2000 census, it had a population of 48,715. As of 2004 its estimated population was 52,440. : University of North Carolina Press The University of North Carolina Press (or UNC Press), founded in 1922, is a university press that is part of the University of North Carolina. External link
Of the twelve papers collected in this volume, seven were originally delivered in 1987 at conferences at Wellesley College Wellesley College, at Wellesley, Mass.; for women; chartered 1870, opened 1875. Long a leader in women's education, it was the first woman's college to have scientific laboratories. and the Graduate School of the City University of New York The City University of New York (CUNY; acronym: IPA pronunciation: [kjuni]), is the public university system of New York City. . Among the others, two (Snyder, Corbier (1)) are based on previously published work, and one was originally presented as a paper in 1985 (Carney). The usual preponderance of Greek studies over Roman, recently remarked upon by the editors of the special issues on Roman women of Helios 16 (1989), is less marked here; four papers are on Roman subjects, one Judaeo-Christian. Eight are presented as four complementary pairs, on Greek women poets (Sappho and Nossis), the Hippocratic corpus The Hippocratic Corpus (Latin: Corpus Hippocraticum), Hippocratic Collection, or Hippocratic Canon, is a collection of around seventy early medical works from ancient Greece strongly associated with the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates and his teachings. , Athenians and Spartans, and women in Roman art and public euergetism (Plancia Magna). The rest are heterogeneous: Macedonian royalty, Roman aristocracy, Fulvia (wife of Mark Antony) and menstrual taboos in Judaism. The predominant theme is the relationship between public and private in women's lives. Jane McIntosh Snyder's account of the major fragments of Sappho's poetry highlights both the private slant given traditional public modes, and the intense sensuality of her private verse. Snyder's analysis, however, is less profound than that of Marilyn Skinner, who in a brilliant essay, engaging word-to-word with the Greek texts, shows how Nossis, a poetess of Hellenistic Magna Graecia Magna Graecia (măg`nə grē`shə) [Lat.,=great Greece], Greek colonies of S Italy. The Greek overseas expansion of the 8th cent. B.C. founded a number of towns that became the centers of a new, thriving Greek territory. , converted and subverted standard poetic tropes. This, as she points out, has important implications for the level of literary education and sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. among Nossis's female contemporaries. Natalie Boymel Kampen's paper is also to be welcomed as an expansion of the (so far) scanty body of work on representations of women in Roman art, a field in which she herself is a notable pioneer. She documents how women's images, rare in the public context of the historical relief, there follow established gender symbolism to promote the values of the family and legitimate reproduction. Mary Taliaferro Boatwright's study of the benefactions by Plancia Magna is a valuable case study to bulk out the hitherto rather thin dossier on Roman female benefactors in the Greek East The Greek East is a phrase used to define the territories of the Greek-speaking, Orthodox Catholic peoples of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, centered around the Byzantine Empire. . Elizabeth Carney shows how recently after the adoption of the royal title by Macedonian kings it began to be applied also to their wives. Shaye J. D. Cohen's "Menstruants and the Sacred in Judaism and Christianity" is the first historical survey in English on this subject. Most of the remaining papers do not, at first sight, give the appearance of breaking new ground, but this is in part a reflection of the high level of activity in recent years. Much good work is going on simultaneously, and similar ideas or approaches are likely to emerge. Also, it would be fair to say that in general recent approaches have here been applied to fresh material, or recently-propounded theories challenged. Thus, Claude Mosse's remarks, in 'Women in the Spartan revolutions of the third century B. C.', on the political effects of female economic power in the period are a useful pendant to Stephen Hodkinson's paper (2) (not available to Mosse Mosse may refer to: In medicine:
The two papers on the Hippocratic corpus examine well-known and often studied texts. Ann Ellis Hanson shows, through selected examples, how the Hippocratics helped the development of gynecology as a separate medical genre, although her presentation confusingly combines this theme with the relationship of medical practice to contemporary folk-treatment. Lesley Dean-Jones' comparison of the accounts of sexual differentia dif·fer·en·ti·a n. pl. dif·fer·en·ti·ae An attribute that distinguishes one entity from another, especially an attribute that distinguishes one species from others of the same genus. in the Hippocratics and in Aristotle, showing how in each case these are referred to a supposed single central physiological difference between the sexes, is the most coherent and convincing to date. Cynthia Patterson's "Marriage and the Married Woman in Athenian Law" discusses "the ways in which 'living together' of a man and woman was recognised and validated by Classical Athenian law and custom, establishing what we can indeed call a marriage or marital relationship." This way of defining the nature of the investigation--in terms both of "validating" a relationship and of "establishing" a marriage--confuses the issue somewhat, since it raises separate questions. While she rightly rejects the search for a single constitutive constitutive /con·sti·tu·tive/ (kon-stich´u-tiv) produced constantly or in fixed amounts, regardless of environmental conditions or demand. event, her own formulation leads her to the conclusion "we ought to see Athenian marriage as a multifaceted process." Her view is that "validation and recognition of the marriage itself was left to social and religious customs and rituals." She compares one or two lawcourt speeches, appealing to the observed behaviour and presumed intent of the couple themselves, with Roman juristic ju·ris·tic also ju·ris·ti·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to a jurist or to jurisprudence. 2. Of or relating to law or legality. ju·ris definitions. It should be noted, however, that the context of the Roman examples is usually the ending of a marriage by one or other of the partners. The Athenian speeches, having to do with inheritance or citizenship claims, are mostly concerned to argue that an actual marriage has existed, and the evidence commonly adduced is not the woman's behavior or intent, but the initial actions of her male relatives in setting up the cohabitation A living arrangement in which an unmarried couple lives together in a long-term relationship that resembles a marriage. Couples cohabit, rather than marry, for a variety of reasons. They may want to test their compatibility before they commit to a legal union. . This is not a polemically feminist collection, like some products of the last decade, but one which maintains high standards both of scholarship and of scholarly objectivity. ENDNOTES (1.) Corbier's paper is a slightly-revised and translated version of an article which originally appeared in French in 1987 as "Les comportements familiaux de l'aristocratie romaine (IIe siecle av. J.-C.-IIIe siecle ap. J.-C.)," Annales ESC See escape character and escape key. See also ESC/P. ESC - escape 42, no. 6 (1987): 1267-85. For another version (also in French), see Parente et Strategies Familiales dans l'Antiquite Romaine edited by Jean Andreau and Hinnerk Bruhns (Rome, 1990), 225-249. (2.) In Classical Sparta: Techniques behind her Success, by A. Powell (London, 1989). Jane F. Gardner University of Reading, England |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion