This book goes beyond simplistic considerations, still occasionally found in popular and academic books, which merely state that, in Rome, men were citizens and women were not or, at best, were second-class citizens. Roman women were citizens and their civic roles and public presence are essential for gaining a better understanding of the Roman Republic. This monograph offers nineteen studies on Roman citizen women during this period, their roles in the public sphere and their place in the community and the res publica to which they belonged. It includes a variety of perspectives, discourses and nuances regarding the question of how women acted as citizens, in order to work towards a historical discourse that places men and women on an equal footing, considering the latter as historical actors as relevant as the former, and which incorporates gender issues into the narrative.
Civis Romana sum: Roman women as citizens
4 págs.
Beyond Roman citizenship: the invisibility of Latin women
6 págs.
De esclava a ciudadana: Transición y negociación de una nueva identidad
8 págs.
8 págs.
10 págs.
Background Noise?: Livy’s Matronae and the Story of Verginia
12 págs.
14 págs.
Mujeres y práctica diplomática en Roma: contextos y oportunidades
Tres mujeres para una República en crisis: Emilia Tercia, Cornelia y Sempronia
Las mujeres de la aristocracia augustea como actores políticos y económicos: Emilia Lépida como caso de estudio
Regimes of Memory: Female Remembrance from the Archaic Period to the End of the Roman Republic
Citoyenneté, appartenance, identité: les matrones au sein d’une communauté des cives dans la Rome républicaine
Cives Romanae Embodied: Ordo Matronarum and female citizenship in Republican Rome
Religión y participación cívica de las mujeres durante la República: Una mirada fuera de Roma
Conclusiones: Ciudadanas en la República romana
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