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Roman women were either luxurious sluts or domestic paragons - at least according to the elite men who wrote Roman history and poetry. These authors, preoccupied with masculine pursuits, introduced women into their works to make a moral point. Even Roman tombstones and the law showcase feminine virtues and reflect biases about "female nature". We also have our own prejudices about ancient Rome and Roman women. Derived from film, television and sensational novels, these prejudices affect the way we "read" the ancient material. So how do we retrieve the lives of "real women"? In this treatment Suzanne Dixon presents a range of examples to support her argument that our ideas of what we "know" about women's work, sexuality, commerce and political activity in the Roman world have been shaped by the format, or genre, of each ancient source. She sugguests ways in which we can read the evidence (including what is left out) more critically. she considers legendary heroines like Verginia and Lucretia and what they tell us about Roman attitudes to rape and women's chastity.She has a sympathetic take on notorious bad girls like Clodia and Messalina and tries to retrieve less spectacular women from the meagre non-literary sources. She introduces us to a huge cast of Roman women, not only the larger-than-life decadents of the Roman orgy, but the small traders of Ostia, the spinners, prostitutes and barmaids celebrated in Pompeian graffiti and the prosperous businesswomen and landowneers of Rome and the Bay of Naples.
Suzanne Dixon is Professor of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Queensland, Australia. She has written a number of books and articles on Roman legal and social history.
List of plates and photo creditsAcknowledgementsPrefaceI. Readings1. Re-readings: a partial survey of scholarship2. Reading the genreII. Reading the Female BodyIntroduction3. Representations of female sexualities4. Rape in Roman law and myth5. Woman as symbol of decadenceIII. Reading the Public Face: Legal and Economic RolesIntroduction6. Womanly weakness in Roman law7. Profits and patronage8. Women's work: perceptions of public and private9. Conclusion: the allure of'La dolce vita' in ancient RomeAppendices1. Map: Italy and its surrounds, late Republic/early Empire2. Some useful dates3. Legal appendix(i) Some legal terms(ii) Some jurists, emperors and datesNotesBibliographyIndex of ancient sourcesGeneral index
Robert A. Levine, Sarah Levine, Suzanne Dixon, Amy Richman, P. Herbert Leiderman, Constance H. Keefer, T. Berry Brazelton, Massachusetts) Levine, Robert A. (Harvard University, San Diego) Levine, Sarah (University of California, Massachusetts) Dixon, Suzanne (Harvard University, Inc.) Richman, Amy (Work-Family Directions, California) Leiderman, P. Herbert (Stanford University School of Medicine, Constance H. (Harvard Medical School) Keefer, Massachusetts) Brazelton, T. Berry (Harvard School of Public Health, Constance Keefer
Robert A. Levine, Sarah Levine, Suzanne Dixon, Amy Richman, P. Herbert Leiderman, Constance H. Keefer, T. Berry Brazelton, Massachusetts) Levine, Robert A. (Harvard University, San Diego) Levine, Sarah (University of California, Massachusetts) Dixon, Suzanne (Harvard University, Inc.) Richman, Amy (Work-Family Directions, California) Leiderman, P. Herbert (Stanford University School of Medicine, Constance H. (Harvard Medical School) Keefer, Massachusetts) Brazelton, T. Berry (Harvard School of Public Health, Constance Keefer