Available Formats
Women in Ancient Greece: A Sourcebook
By (Author) Professor Bonnie MacLachlan
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
31st May 2012
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
Gender studies: women and girls
938.0082
Paperback
248
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
396g
The study of women in the ancient Mediterranean world is a topic of growing interest among classicists and ancient historians, and also students of history, sociology and women's studies. This volume is an essential resource supplying a compilation of source material in translation, with suggestions for further reading, a general bibliography, and an index of ancient authors and works. Texts come from literary, rhetorical, philosophical and legal sources, as well as papyri and inscriptions, and each text will be placed into the cultural mosaic to which it belongs. Ranging geographically from the Greek mainland and the communities along the eastern shores of the Mediterranean, to Egypt and the Greek West (modern day southern Italy and Sicily), the volume follows a clear chronological structure. Beginning in the eighth century BCE the coverage continues through Archaic and Classical Athens concluding with the Hellenistic era.
The author provides a stylishly written and academically concise overview of the topic including much needed information on how one should approach such a broad range of source material on the lives of ancient Greek women MacLachlans translations work well and are reader-friendly. The selection of materials is also admirable. -- Marguerite Johnson, The University of Newcastle, Australia * Bryn Mawr Classical Review *
Bonnie MacLachlan is Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Western Ontario. Her published volumes include The Age of Grace: Charis in Early Greek Poetry (1993) and Virginity Revisited: The Autonomy of the Unpossessed Body, co-edited with Judith Fletcher (2007).