Feminist Theory and the ClassicsNancy Sorkin Rabinowitz, Amy Richlin This text aims to provide a broad introduction to issues in feminist theory for classicists, and at the same time, to provide feminists with an introduction to feminist work on antiquity. |
Contents
Remembering | 23 |
Feminist Theory Historical Periods Literary Canons | 44 |
Finding | 75 |
Copyright | |
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academic activities African Amy Richlin ancient Greek ancient world anthropology approach archaeology Arethusa Athenian Athens Black feminist Cambridge Catullus century B.C.E. Classical Antiquity classical archaeologists Cleopatra Conkey construction contemporary context Creusa critique Culham culture Cynthia discipline discourse duBois elegy epistemology essay evidence example excavation female feminine feminism feminist archaeology feminist classicists feminist theory gender Gimbutas Goddess Greco-Roman Greece Greece and Rome gynocentric Hallett Halperin Harrison Helios Hellenistic ideology images Irigaray Jane Jane Ellen Harrison Jardine language Latin Lauretis Lesbian literary literature male Marxist matriculture misogyny modern mother myth Native American Oedipus oppression Ovid past patriarchal period perspective poetry political Pomeroy position Propertius Propertius's question Richlin ritual roles Routledge Sappho scholarship Seneca sexual Skinner social society Spector spiritual status study of women texts tion traditional tragedy Translated Troades University Press voice Western Winkler woman women in ancient Women in Antiquity writing York