Knowledge about the roles of women in ancient civilizations has
been limited to traditionally held notions, but recent discoveries
and research have led to exciting insights into the great variety
of ways in which women contributed to ancient cultures. This
reference work, designed for student research, features lengthy
essays and a wealth of new information about women's roles in
twelve ancient civilizations around the world--China, India, Japan,
Mesopotamia, the Levant, Egypt, West Africa, Greece, Rome, the
Maya, the Inca, and Native North America.
Historical studies have tended to ignore women's roles in
ancient civilizations and to devalue their contributions to the
community. These essays examine women's religious, political,
public, economic, and domestic roles, their legal status, creative
expression in art and literature, and notions of beauty. Students
can then compare women's roles across cultures. The contributors,
each of whom is a subject specialist, examine not only the nature
of women's limitations in patriarchal culture but the ways in which
women often succeeded, despite these limitations, in becoming
agents of social change. Each essay begins with a timeline of
events in the history of that culture to place the narrative in
historical context, and concludes with suggestions for further
reading about women in that culture.
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