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6. Monumental Presence and Absence: Approaching the Material Traces of Historical Women in the Classical World
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- List of Contributors x
- 1. Believing Ancient Women: An Introduction and Feminist Epistemological Field Guide 1
- 2. ‘For you know how we cared for you’: Sappho and Queer Epistemology 30
- 3. En-gendering Knowledge with the Oceanids in Prometheus Bound 48
- 4. Women’s Complaints about Violence at Athens: Zobia and Aristogeiton 68
- 5. Bodies of Knowledge: Diotima’s Reproductive Expertise in the Symposium 82
- 6. Monumental Presence and Absence: Approaching the Material Traces of Historical Women in the Classical World 102
- 7. Plautus’s Truculentus and Terence’s Hecyra: Patriarchal Authority and Women’s Credibility 121
- 8. Incidental Women in the Letters of Cicero 138
- 9. Signifying Dido: Constructs of Race and Gender in Augustan Rome 156
- 10. But She Didn’t Complain: Ovid’s Leucothoe, Rape Myths and Hermeneutical Injustice 169
- 11. ‘Feebly fighting back’: Stuprum in Eumolpus’s Pergamene Boy 185
- 12. The Viability of Feminist Stoicism: On the Compatibility of Stoic and Feminist Epistemology 202
- 13. What Everyone Knows: Hermeneutical Injustice in the Medieval Iphis 221
- 14. Religious Authority and Classical Reception in Baroque Rome: Martha Marchina’s Musa Posthuma and Feminist Epistemologies of Care 242
- 15. ‘Grey’ Rape on the Silver Screen: Rapes of Enslaved People in Mass Media about the Ancient World 262
- Selected Bibliography 280
- Index 319
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- List of Contributors x
- 1. Believing Ancient Women: An Introduction and Feminist Epistemological Field Guide 1
- 2. ‘For you know how we cared for you’: Sappho and Queer Epistemology 30
- 3. En-gendering Knowledge with the Oceanids in Prometheus Bound 48
- 4. Women’s Complaints about Violence at Athens: Zobia and Aristogeiton 68
- 5. Bodies of Knowledge: Diotima’s Reproductive Expertise in the Symposium 82
- 6. Monumental Presence and Absence: Approaching the Material Traces of Historical Women in the Classical World 102
- 7. Plautus’s Truculentus and Terence’s Hecyra: Patriarchal Authority and Women’s Credibility 121
- 8. Incidental Women in the Letters of Cicero 138
- 9. Signifying Dido: Constructs of Race and Gender in Augustan Rome 156
- 10. But She Didn’t Complain: Ovid’s Leucothoe, Rape Myths and Hermeneutical Injustice 169
- 11. ‘Feebly fighting back’: Stuprum in Eumolpus’s Pergamene Boy 185
- 12. The Viability of Feminist Stoicism: On the Compatibility of Stoic and Feminist Epistemology 202
- 13. What Everyone Knows: Hermeneutical Injustice in the Medieval Iphis 221
- 14. Religious Authority and Classical Reception in Baroque Rome: Martha Marchina’s Musa Posthuma and Feminist Epistemologies of Care 242
- 15. ‘Grey’ Rape on the Silver Screen: Rapes of Enslaved People in Mass Media about the Ancient World 262
- Selected Bibliography 280
- Index 319