From Madeline Miller's The Song of Achilles (2011) to Pat Barker's The
Voyage Home (2024), there has been a huge rise in women's rewritings
of ancient myths and texts in recent years. Women writers are looking
back to the classical past more than ever before, and there is serious
public interest in women's reworkings of the ancient world. But at the
same time, this is nothing new: women have been responding to the
worlds of Greece and Rome for hundreds of years, across many different
time periods, and multiple cultures and languages. This first volume
in a two-volume set explores the different ways that women have retold
and responded to Classics across the ages, as well as how these
responses might resist or unpack the tensions inherent in notions of
gender, race, canonicity, class and cultural heritage-in a context in
which classical education and scholarship have been confined to the
ivory tower, studied by men in pursuit of an understanding of the
'great men' of history. Looking at extraordinary women writers across
thousands of years, from Sappho, Marguerite de Navarre, Lucrezia
Marinella and Renée Vivien to Tayari Jones, Roz Kaveney, Zadie Smith
and Anne Carson, from ancient Greece to the Venezuelan diaspora, this
volume demonstrates the urgency and the centrality of women's
creations in the world of Classics.
Les mer
A Retrospective
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350444393
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter