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Athenian Women

Athenian Women. Daughters of Demeter. Polarities. Limit---Unlimited One --- Plurality Right --- Left Male --- Female Straight --- Crooked Light --- Darkness Good --- Evil Warm --- Cold Hard --- Soft.

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Athenian Women

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  1. Athenian Women Daughters of Demeter

  2. Polarities Limit---Unlimited One --- Plurality Right --- Left Male --- Female Straight --- Crooked Light --- Darkness Good --- Evil Warm --- Cold Hard --- Soft Polarities are a way of understanding a complete phenomenon (e.g. humanity) in light of its naturally opposing elements (e.g. men and women) “Daughters of Demeter” by Marilyn Katz

  3. Genesis and Generation Hesiod’s Theogony: from Chaos (characterized by feminine generation and influence), divine order is establishedby patriarchal authority (Zeus). Athena represents “the magnitude and beneficence of female potency when submitted to benign male control” In the polis, human society is characterized by male control over females. Kyrios: guardian Epikleros: heiress

  4. Heroes and Heroines Homer: an ideal marriage-relationship is shown as a “union of complementaries” (Hector and Andromache, Odysseus and Penelope) “Women are preoccupied with spinning and weaving, with safeguarding the household stores, and with the care of their children; they are responsible for petitioning the gods in time of war and for mourning over the dead, and they are the victims consigned to slavery when the city falls.” “Man’s job is in the fields, the agora, the affairs of the city; women’s work is spinning wool, baking bread, keeping house.”

  5. Women’s Virtues No man is allowed to sell a daughter or a sister, unless he finds that she is no longer a virgin. (Solon) “We have hetairai for pleasure, concubines for the daily care of the body, but wives to bear us legitimate children and to be the trusted guardians of our household” (Demosthenes) Hetaira: “companion,” a high-quality prostitute

  6. A hetaira at work

  7. The Ludovisi throne contrasts the modest wife and the very available hetaira in a monument to Aphrodite (c. 460)

  8. Women’s Virtues “It is better for a woman to remain within than to wander about.” (Xenophon) A woman who travels outside the house must be of such an age that onlookers might ask, not whose wife she is, but whose mother. (Hyperides) Oikos: household

  9. Women’s Virtues Your reputation is glorious if you do not prove inferior to your own nature and if there is the least possible talk about you among men, whether in praise or blame. (Thucydides [Pericles]) The memory of your virtue, Theophile, will never die: Self-controlled, good, and industrious, possessing every virtue. (Funeral epigram)

  10. Women’s Virtues No finer, greater gift in the world than that...when man and woman possess their home, two minds,two hearts that work as one. Despair to their enemies,joy to all their friends. Their own best claim to glory. Homer, Odyssey

  11. Everyday Life Getting water Courtyard structure of houses Prevalence of female domestic slaves Work for pay as something to be avoided if possible: a sign of poverty and / or immodesty Poor women and slaves in the agora, wealthier women at home Evidence of women (mostly not in Athens) in professions Farewell, tomb of Melitte; a good woman lies here. You loved your husband Onesimus; he loved you in return. You were the best, and so he laments your death, for you were a good woman. And to you farewell, dearest of men; love my children.

  12. Everyday Life

  13. Everyday Life • Andron (men’s room) = dining room • Women upstairs but using courtyard • Shifting domestic usage

  14. A nice, upper class home with separate men’s and women’s quarters Everyday Life

  15. Everyday Life When we are young and in our father’s house, I think we live the sweetest life of all of humankind … Now outside my father’s house I am nothing. (Sophocles [Procne])

  16. Everyday Life • Young women: • Assisting with household tasks • Education in singing and dancing • Full of dangerous sexuality – dangerous to themselves and others

  17. Everyday Life • Child care central • Pregnant women seldom if ever depicted

  18. Where we can tell the gender of babies shown in Greek art, they are almost always male Women’s role was to produce citizen children But citizenship was important for women too in Athens

  19. Everyday Life A woman offers her baby to its father Men had the ability to accept or refuse children born to their household Infant exposure of unwanted children: “If it is male, keep it, if it is female, expose it.”

  20. finis

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