WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Woman in the golden ages cover

Woman in the golden ages

Chapter 25: THE “NEW WOMAN” OF OLD ROME
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A series of essays surveys the character, social position, and intellectual attainments of women across classical and Renaissance eras, from Greek poetry and Spartan and Athenian life through Roman agitation and early Christian convents to the Italian and French renaissances and salon culture. It highlights notable figures such as Sappho and Aspasia, examines learned women, literary courts, and the emergence of salons, and discusses the limitations of sources and male bias in historical records while aiming to vindicate women's intellectual influence rather than engage contemporary polemics.

THE “NEW WOMAN” OF OLD ROME

· Wickedness of Imperial Days ·
· The Reverse of the Picture ·
· Parallel between the Romans and Ourselves ·
· Their “New Woman” ·
· Her Political Wisdom · Her Relative Independence ·
· Literature in the Golden Age ·
· Horace · Ovid ·
· Tributes to Cultivated Women in Letters of Cicero ·
· Literary Circles · Opinions of Satirists ·
· Reaction on Manners ·
· Tributes in Letters of Pliny and Seneca ·
· Glimpses of Family Life in Correspondence of Marcus Aurelius and Fronto ·
· Public Honors to Women ·