Finding Persephone: Women's Rituals in the Ancient MediterraneanMaryline G. Parca, Angeliki Tzanetou Indiana University Press, 2007 - 327 strán (strany) Drawing upon the latest research in gender studies, history of religion, feminism, ritual theory, performance, anthropology, archaeology, and art history, Finding Persephone investigates the ways in which the religious lives and ritual practices of women in Greek and Roman antiquity helped shape their social and civic identity. Barred from participating in many public arenas, women asserted their presence by performing rituals at festivals and presiding over rites associated with life passages and healing. The essays in this lively and timely volume reveal the central place of women in the religious and ritual practices of the societies of the ancient Mediterranean. Readers interested in religion, women's studies, and classical antiquity will find a unique exploration of the nature and character of women's autonomy within the religious sphere and a full account of women's agency in the public domain. |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 70.
... woman at a laver with a water bucket below , which makes her appear to be washing , 20 and a terracotta figurine of woman at a similar stand who is certainly either grinding grain or rolling out dough.2 21 The most clear - cut example ...
... woman who had married a plebeian might still participate in rites restricted to patrician matrons . In response , the patrician woman at the center of the controversy established a shrine to Pudicitia Plebeia in her home , where rit ...
... woman who grinds on her own with her utterance and simultaneous action is an identical closed - circuit communication : she is both the agent and the receiver of the message she produces . Performativ- ity and production work hand in ...
Obsah
CRITICAL | 3 |
Sources and Methodology | 17 |
THE SCANDAL OF WOMENS RITUAL | 29 |
Autorské práva | |
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