ebook img

Female head covering in the Early Imperial Period PDF

120 Pages·2014·1.04 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Female head covering in the Early Imperial Period

FEMALE HEAD COVERING IN THE EARLY IMPERIAL PERIOD: QUESTIONS OF THE COVERED ‘OTHER’ AND THE IDEAL OF AUGUSTAN WOMANHOOD. Elizabeth Smith, BA (Macquarie) OCTOBER 10, 2014 ARTS Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Research Department of Ancient History, Faculty of Arts, Macquarie University, Sydney ii For Sam iii iv Contents Thesis Summary .................................................................................................................................... vii Declaration ............................................................................................................................................ ix Translations ........................................................................................................................................... xi Citations ................................................................................................................................................. xi Abbreviations ........................................................................................................................................ xi Acknowledgements ..............................................................................................................................xiii Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 1 Chapter One: Review of Current Scholarship ......................................................................................... 5 Studies on head covering in Rome ..................................................................................................... 5 Aphrodite’s Tortoise and the ‘Western’ discourse on head covering .............................................. 13 Review of terminology ..................................................................................................................... 19 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................ 20 Chapter Two: Approach and methodology: language and the construction of identity ..................... 21 Research strategy and selection of sources ..................................................................................... 21 Formal analytical processes.............................................................................................................. 23 Key definitions and conceptual frameworks .................................................................................... 24 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................ 30 Chapter Three: Early imperial poetry: the amictus, palla, and the ‘deviant’ versus ‘ideal’ female. .... 31 The amictus ...................................................................................................................................... 34 The palla ........................................................................................................................................... 47 Infulae and Vittae ............................................................................................................................. 56 The mitra .......................................................................................................................................... 62 The flammeum ................................................................................................................................. 65 Conclusion: ....................................................................................................................................... 68 Chapter Four: The early imperial discourse on covering: custom, metaphor and gender. ................. 71 Uncovered and loose hair at funeral events .................................................................................... 72 Garments and gestures in the metaphors and imagery of covering ................................................ 77 Attitudes to covering: perspectives from Sulpicia and Valerius Maximus ....................................... 83 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................ 92 Conclusion and Opportunities for further research. ............................................................................ 95 Bibliography .......................................................................................................................................... 99 v vi Thesis Summary This thesis examines the nature of the literary evidence for female head covering in early imperial Rome (defined for this purpose as 31 BC- AD 68) via a socio-cultural analysis of early imperial poetry. Data is collected from searches in the Thesaurus Latinae Linguae (TLL) for the terms amictus, palla, infula, vitta, mitra and flammeum. Patterns as to the use of these head covering garments and adornments to characterise female protagonists in early imperial poetry are analysed and early imperial attitudes to covering are determined. It is proposed that attitudes to covering in early imperial Rome were not beholden to a single perspective and concluded that a complex discourse on covering existed in early imperial literature. The approach of the thesis is informed by a post-colonial feminist reading of Orientalism that allows for critique of previous scholars who have ‘other-ed’ ancient women vis-à-vis the use of terms such as ‘veil’. Application of this reading to the early imperial corpus elucidates information about gender roles in the Augustan era and provides insight into ancient Rome as a nuanced culture that possessed an array of social roles, values and ways of making meaning. vii viii Declaration I, Elizabeth Smith, certify that this thesis has not been submitted for a higher degree to any other university or institution. Date: 09/10/2014 Signature: ix x

Description:
Where an alternate translation has been used it is noted and cited in .. 54-57, 59; H. Bender, “De Habitu Vestis: Clothing in the Aeneid”, pp. 149-151; D.R. Archaeological Remains and the Evidence from the Mishnah”, p. 186, 188
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.