Women of Ancient GreeceEdinburgh University Press, 2003 - 240 עמודים Pierre Brulé's brilliant evocation of how women lived in ancient Greece describes every aspect of their lives, including their religious, familial and domestic duties, their economic importance, and their social, moral and legal status as wives, cohabitees or slaves. He examines their sexual roles, what the status of a woman's body was and what her own and others' attitudes were likely to be towards it. Professor Brulé does all this in the context of the development and achievements of Greek civilisation.Women appear not to have been highly regarded in ancient Greece, with female infanticide a common practice. Strains of misogyny can be heard in Greek literature, drama and philosophy: 'The most unintelligent people in the world' is how one character refers to women in Plato's Symposium (which also features Diotima, his best-known female sage). Women had few duties beyond the home, and the evidence that they existed at all is tantalisingly small. Yet by piecing together fragments and clues, the author gives us a vivid account of women's lives in Greece 2,500 years ago.Pierre Brulé's deft scholarship and engaging style make this fascinating history always readable, sometimes moving, and often entertaining. |
תוכן
Women of the epics | 43 |
On the body and sexuality | 74 |
Joys and miseries of married life | 114 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
3 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Achilles adult Agamemnon Alcibiades Alcinous amphipoloi animal Aphrodite Apollodorus Aristophanes Aristotle Artemis Aspasia Athenaeus Athenian Athens bacchants beauty blood body boys Briseis Briseis and Chryseis Callias child Chryseis citizens concubine courtesan Cyrus daughter deity Demeter desire Dionysus divine dowry everything father female feminine gamos gender girls give goddess gods Greece Greek Greek women hand heart Hera Hesiod hetaira Hipponicus Homeric husband idea Iliad Ischomachus kind king Kore koure legitimate Littré vol living maenads male marriage married masculine matrimonial matter means misogyny mistress mother nature Nausicaa Neaera Nicarete nymphe Odysseus Oeconomicus Oeconomicus vii one's Palatine Anthology Pandora parthenos pederastic Penelope Pericles Phano pleasure Plutarch political priestess prostitutes puberty reason ritual role Semonides sexual slaves social Socrates speak sperm Stephanus Telemachus thygater tion virgin wealth wife wives woman words Xanthippus Xenophon young Zeus