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This volume offers new insights into ancient figurations of
temporality by focusing on the relationship between gender and time
across a range of genres. Each chapter in this collection places
gender at the center of its exploration of time, and the volume
includes time in treatises, genealogical lists, calendars,
prophetic literature, ritual practice and historical and poetic
narratives from the Greco-Roman world. Many of the chapters begin
with female characters, but all of them emphasize how and why time
is an integral component of ancient categories of female and male.
Relying on theorists who offer ways to explore the connections
between time and gender encoded in narrative tropes, plots,
pronouns, images or metaphors, the contributors tease out how time
and gender were intertwined in the symbolic register of Greek and
Roman thought. Narratives of Time and Gender in Antiquity provides
a rich and provocative theoretical analysis of time-and its
relationship to gender-in ancient texts. It will be of interest to
anyone working on time in the ancient world, or students of gender
in antiquity.
Contributions in this volume demonstrate how, across the ancient
Mediterranean and over hundreds of years, women's rituals
intersected with the political, economic, cultural, or religious
spheres of their communities in a way that has only recently
started to gain sustained academic attention. The volume aims to
tease out a number of different approaches and contexts, and to
expand existing studies of women in the ancient world as well as
scholarship on religious and social history. The contributors face
a famously difficult task: ancient authors rarely recorded aspects
of women's lives, including their songs, prophecies, and prayers.
Many of the objects women made and used in ritual were perishable
and have not survived; certain kinds of ritual objects (lowly
undecorated pots, for example) tend not even to be recorded in
archaeological reports. However, the broad range of contributions
in this volume demonstrates the multiplicity of materials that can
be used as evidence - including inscriptions, textiles, ceramics,
figurative art, and written sources - and the range of
methodologies that can be used, from analysis of texts, images, and
material evidence to cognitive and comparative approaches.
This volume offers new insights into ancient figurations of
temporality by focusing on the relationship between gender and time
across a range of genres. Each chapter in this collection places
gender at the center of its exploration of time, and the volume
includes time in treatises, genealogical lists, calendars,
prophetic literature, ritual practice and historical and poetic
narratives from the Greco-Roman world. Many of the chapters begin
with female characters, but all of them emphasize how and why time
is an integral component of ancient categories of female and male.
Relying on theorists who offer ways to explore the connections
between time and gender encoded in narrative tropes, plots,
pronouns, images or metaphors, the contributors tease out how time
and gender were intertwined in the symbolic register of Greek and
Roman thought. Narratives of Time and Gender in Antiquity provides
a rich and provocative theoretical analysis of time-and its
relationship to gender-in ancient texts. It will be of interest to
anyone working on time in the ancient world, or students of gender
in antiquity.
Contributions in this volume demonstrate how, across the ancient
Mediterranean and over hundreds of years, women's rituals
intersected with the political, economic, cultural, or religious
spheres of their communities in a way that has only recently
started to gain sustained academic attention. The volume aims to
tease out a number of different approaches and contexts, and to
expand existing studies of women in the ancient world as well as
scholarship on religious and social history. The contributors face
a famously difficult task: ancient authors rarely recorded aspects
of women's lives, including their songs, prophecies, and prayers.
Many of the objects women made and used in ritual were perishable
and have not survived; certain kinds of ritual objects (lowly
undecorated pots, for example) tend not even to be recorded in
archaeological reports. However, the broad range of contributions
in this volume demonstrates the multiplicity of materials that can
be used as evidence - including inscriptions, textiles, ceramics,
figurative art, and written sources - and the range of
methodologies that can be used, from analysis of texts, images, and
material evidence to cognitive and comparative approaches.
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