Mothering and Motherhood in Ancient Greece and Rome

Amazon.com Price: $25.00 (as of 03/05/2019 06:48 PST- Details)

Description

Motherhood played a central role in ancient Greece and Rome, despite the virtual absence of female participation in the public spheres of life. Mothers could wield enormous influence as the reproductive bodies of society and, in many cases, of culture. Yet motherhood and acts of mothering have received somewhat little focused and sustained attention by modern scholars, who have concentrated almost exclusively on analyzing depictions of ancient women more in most cases.

In this volume, experts from across the humanities present a wealth of evidence from legal, literary, and medical texts, in addition to art, architecture, ritual, and material culture, to reveal the multilayered dimensions of motherhood in both Greece and Rome and to confront the truth that not all mothers and acts of mothering can also be easily categorized. The authors believe a number of mothers—from the mythical to the real, from empress to prostitute, and from citizen to foreigner—to expose both the mundane and the ideologically charged lives of mothers in the Classical world. Some essays focus on motherhood as a largely private (emotional, intimate) experience, at the same time as others explore the ramifications of public, oftentimes politicized, displays of motherhood. This state-of-the art look at mothers and mothering in the ancient world also takes on a contemporary relevance as the authors sign up for current debates on motherhood and suggest links between the lives of ancient mothers and the diverse, steadily conflicting roles of women in modern Western society.

Home » Shop » Books » Subjects » Engineering and Transportation » Engineering » Reference » Atlases and Maps » World » Women in History » Mothering and Motherhood in Ancient Greece and Rome

Recent Products