Students

AHIS3201 – Women and Gender in the Ancient World

2023 – Session 1, In person-scheduled-weekday, North Ryde

General Information

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Unit convenor and teaching staff Unit convenor and teaching staff
Peter Keegan
Julia Hamilton
Credit points Credit points
10
Prerequisites Prerequisites
130cp at 1000 level and above or 20cp in AHIS or AHST units at 2000 level or above
Corequisites Corequisites
Co-badged status Co-badged status
Unit description Unit description

This unit is a study of sexuality and gender in the Egyptian, Near Eastern and Ancient Mediterranean worlds, but with special emphasis on Ancient Greek and Roman society. It also looks at the convergence of classical traditions and Judaeo-Christian thought in late antique Rome. The unit draws upon the contributions of women's history and feminist scholarship to the study of antiquity, paying particular attention to the role of historiography in understanding past worlds.

Important Academic Dates

Information about important academic dates including deadlines for withdrawing from units are available at https://www.mq.edu.au/study/calendar-of-dates

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:

  • ULO1: Acquire and demonstrate knowledge of the evidence relating to the life experiences of women and concepts of gender in the ancient world;
  • ULO2: Evaluate ancient source material and modern interpretations of that material at an advanced level;
  • ULO3: Formulate arguments, express ideas and respond to the views of staff and peers in both oral and written form at an advanced level;
  • ULO4: Appreciate historiographical theories and how historical information (in the broadest sense) may be extracted from ancient texts and archaeological remains.

General Assessment Information

1. SOURCE ANALYSIS 

Topics for discussion and written assignment are set out under each week on the unit's iLearn site. ONE written assignment is to be submitted via Turnitin for assessment on the SUNDAY after the relevant Tuesday tutorial by 11.55 pm. It will count for 20% of the final mark. (Preparation for each tutorial, however, is advised, since your digestion of the material covered in seminars will be relevant to your podcast preparation, including the topics in the latter part of the unit).

The appropriate length of your source analysis will be approximately 1000 words (plus or minus 10%). Your analysis must be documented and based on a direct examination of the ancient sources. If modern scholarship is used, a bibliography should be attached. Please note that footnotes and bibliography do not count in the word length for this unit.

NB The topic that you choose should not overlap in any way with the subject chosen for your PODCAST or BLOG.

2. PODCAST 

One podcast, counting for 40% of the final mark, is required. It should not exceed seven (7) minutes in length. Your podcast should be uploaded no later than SUNDAY APRIL 30th by 11.55pm. Topics will be available early in the session. Please note that you will be using the Adobe Creative Cloud suite of digital tools to create your podcast (specifically, Adobe Audition). If you are planning to present your podcast in the field of Roman or Early Christian studies (which may not have been covered in lectures) should consult the appropriate pre-recorded lectures and/or the unit convenor. (To authenticate the academic integrity of this task, a verbatim script of your podcast will be uploaded to Turnitin by the due date and time, as noted above.) 

To reiterate, a marker will be assessing:

(i) the degree to which you answer the question(s) set (within the word limit);

(ii) the degree to which you refer to the ancient evidence in support of your arguments and;

(iii) the clarity of your presentation.

Marking rubrics and guidelines for podcasting will also be provided on the iLearn site.

A marker shall be assessing:

(i) the degree to which you answer the question(s) set (within the word limit);

(ii) the degree to which you cite the ancient evidence in support of your arguments; and

(iii) the clarity of your presentation.

Marking rubrics and guidelines for referencing will also be provided on the iLearn site.

NB The topic that you choose should not overlap in any way with the subject chosen for your SOURCE ANALYSIS or BLOG.

3. BLOG 

One blog, counting for 40% of the final mark, is required. It should not exceed 2000 words. Your blog ishould be uploaded no later than SUNDAY JUNE 4th by 11.55pm. Topics will be precirculated early in the session. Please note that you will be using the Adobe Creative Cloud suite of digital tools to create your blog (specifically, Adobe Portfolio). You should consult widely across the content of the unit in order to create your blog. (To authenticate the academic integrity of this task, a verbatim script of your blog will be uploaded to Turnitin by the due date and time, as noted above.)

To reiterate, a marker will be assessing:

(i) the degree to which you answer the chosen topic (within the word limit);

(ii) the degree to which you cite the ancient evidence in support of your arguments and;

(iii) the clarity of your presentation.

Marking rubrics and guidelines for referencing will also be provided on the iLearn site.

NB The topic that you choose should not overlap in any way with the subject chosen for your SOURCE ANALYSIS or PODCAST.

PENALTY FOR LATE SUBMISSION OF ASSESSMENT

Unless a Special Consideration request has been submitted and approved, a 5% penalty (of the total possible mark) will be applied each day a written assessment is not submitted, up until the 7th day (including weekends). After the 7th day, a mark of‚ 0 (zero) will be awarded even if the assessment is submitted. Submission time for all written assessments is set at 11.55pm. A 1-hour grace period is provided to students who experience a technical issue. 

This late penalty will apply to non-timed sensitive assessment (incl essays, reports, posters, portfolios, journals, recordings etc). Late submission of time sensitive tasks (such as tests/exams, performance assessments/presentations, scheduled practical assessments/labs etc) will only be addressed by the unit convenor in a Special consideration application. Special Consideration outcome may result in a new question or topic. 

Assessment Tasks

Name Weighting Hurdle Due
Source Analysis 20% No 23:55, Sunday of the week in which the tutorial is delivered
Blog 40% No 23:55, 30-04-23
Podcast 40% No 23:55, 4-06-23

Source Analysis

Assessment Type 1: Qualitative analysis task
Indicative Time on Task 2: 30 hours
Due: 23:55, Sunday of the week in which the tutorial is delivered
Weighting: 20%

 

This task asks you to extract and analyse information relevant to the experience of a woman (or women) in a particular ancient society and/or concepts of gender and sexuality in antiquity. A marking rubric, task outline, and word limit will be available on the unit homepage. Submission: Turnitin Assignment.

 


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Acquire and demonstrate knowledge of the evidence relating to the life experiences of women and concepts of gender in the ancient world;
  • Evaluate ancient source material and modern interpretations of that material at an advanced level;
  • Formulate arguments, express ideas and respond to the views of staff and peers in both oral and written form at an advanced level;
  • Appreciate historiographical theories and how historical information (in the broadest sense) may be extracted from ancient texts and archaeological remains.

Blog

Assessment Type 1: Non-academic writing
Indicative Time on Task 2: 41.5 hours
Due: 23:55, 30-04-23
Weighting: 40%

 

This task gives you an opportunity to clarify your thinking about the material covered throughout the unit, and, in accordance with the study of history and archaeology at an advanced undergraduate level, your appreciation of historiographical theories. A marking rubric, task outline, and word limit will be available on the unit homepage. Submission: Adobe Creative Cloud. (You will receive instruction in creating your blog during Week 11 of the teaching session.)

 


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Acquire and demonstrate knowledge of the evidence relating to the life experiences of women and concepts of gender in the ancient world;
  • Evaluate ancient source material and modern interpretations of that material at an advanced level;
  • Formulate arguments, express ideas and respond to the views of staff and peers in both oral and written form at an advanced level;
  • Appreciate historiographical theories and how historical information (in the broadest sense) may be extracted from ancient texts and archaeological remains.

Podcast

Assessment Type 1: Media presentation
Indicative Time on Task 2: 41.5 hours
Due: 23:55, 4-06-23
Weighting: 40%

 

This task asks you to focus on a particular ancient author, literary genre or form of archaeological evidence. You will extract and analyse information relevant to the place of women in a particular ancient society and/or concepts of gender and sexuality in antiquity. A marking rubric, task outline, and time/word limit will be available on the unit homepage. Submission: Adobe Creative Cloud. (You will receive instruction in creating your podcast during Week 4 of the teaching session.)

 


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Acquire and demonstrate knowledge of the evidence relating to the life experiences of women and concepts of gender in the ancient world;
  • Evaluate ancient source material and modern interpretations of that material at an advanced level;
  • Formulate arguments, express ideas and respond to the views of staff and peers in both oral and written form at an advanced level;
  • Appreciate historiographical theories and how historical information (in the broadest sense) may be extracted from ancient texts and archaeological remains.

1 If you need help with your assignment, please contact:

  • the academic teaching staff in your unit for guidance in understanding or completing this type of assessment
  • the Writing Centre for academic skills support.

2 Indicative time-on-task is an estimate of the time required for completion of the assessment task and is subject to individual variation

Delivery and Resources

UNIT REQUIREMENTS AND EXPECTATIONS

Classes

For lecture/tutorial times and classrooms please consult the MQ Timetable website: https://timetables.mq.edu.au/2023/. This website will display up-to-date information on your classes. For any variations on this information, please consult the AHIS3201 iLearn website (which is accessible one week prior to commencement of teaching session).

Lectures: There are two or more recorded lectures a week for all weeks of the session. The importance of regular listening to lectures is that we signal the topics that we deem significant. It is expected that you audit at least 26 lectures (labelled REQUIRED) over the session. We shall expect you to discuss these topics in the podcast and blog.

Tutorials: There is a tutorial for most weeks of the session in which it is expected that students will participate actively.

Each student will have undertaken the reading for each week’s tutorial and will contribute to the best of their ability to the discussion. A unit like this, drawing on such a broad range of material and different perspectives, works best when everyone brings their thoughts to the table. Participation in tutorials is considered a vital and rewarding part of the unit.

Required and Recommended Texts

The areas covered in this unit are too broad for a single set text. Students will, however, be asked to consult a Book of Readings which will be used for specific tutorials, in lectures and in assessment preparation. It will be made available electronically on the iLearn site.

In this unit emphasis is placed upon the direct examination of the ancient sources and evidence. Students are expected to base all their work on a personal examination of these sources. It will not be sufficient simply to read modern studies on any topic; however sound and highly recommended these are: it will be essential to look first at the ancient sources on which all modern studies are necessarily based. 

The work which marked a major change in the academic landscape, Sarah B. Pomeroy's Goddesses, Whores, Wives and Slaves. Women in Classical Antiquity (New York, Schocken Books, 1975) treats many of the periods covered by this unit. An electronic copy of Pomeroy is available via Leganto in the Macquarie University Library.

Highly recommended for purchase (and a book which most students interested in this subject will want to have in their own libraries) is Mary R. Lefkowitz and Maureen B. Fant's Women's Life in Greece and Rome: a sourcebook in translation (any edition).

The literature is now immense, and growing annually. Students can pick their own ways through the bibliographies which will open up with the reading of each new work. Every time I taught this course, I used to issue a new bibliography, and it was out of date before the session finished. I shall now direct you to certain readings as the session unfolds. Overall, I point you to the Diotima website: <https://diotima-doctafemina.org/> which contains a wealth of bibliographical material. There you will find far more than you hoped for(!)—and we shall all start sharing exciting new finds.

Other internet sites are discussed by John Younger 'Gender and Sexuality on the Internet' in Maria Wyke (ed.), Gender and the Body in the Ancient Mediterranean (Oxford 1998) 209–213. Please share with us any useful sites found.

Other general coverages will be found in Eva Cantarella's Pandora's Daughters. The Roles and Status of Women in Greek and Roman Antiquity (Baltimore & London 1987) and Bisexuality in the Ancient World (1988, Eng. trans. Cormac Ó Cuilleanáin, New Haven 1992). There is also a general survey of the subject in Gillian Clark's Women in the Ancient World (Greece & Rome. New Surveys in the Classics 21 (Oxford 1989). See also Susan Treggiari, Women of the Ancient World vol. 1 (London 2007); Brook Holmes, Gender. Antiquity and its Legacy (London 2012); Sharon L. James and Sheila Dillon (eds), A Companion to Women in the Ancient World (Chichester, West Sussex 2012); Janet H. Tulloch (ed.), A Cultural History of Women in Antiquity(London  2013); Thomas K. Hubbard (ed.), A Companion to Greek and Roman Sexualities (Chichester, West Sussex 2014); Mark Masterson, Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz and James Robson (eds), Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. Rewriting Antiquity (London & New York  2015); and S.L. Budin and J. MacIntosh Turfa (eds), Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World (London 2016).

Those of you interested in what survives of women's own writings from antiquity (all too little) might buy a copy of Macquarie's own Ian Plant, Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome (London 2004). 

Technology Used and Required

The unit has an iLearn page which can be accessed via your iLearn login. PC and internet access are therefore required. Basic computer skills (e.g., internet browsing) and skills in word processing are also a requirement. You will also receive training in the use of the Adobe Creative Cloud suite of digital tools (in particular, Adobe Audition and Portfolio). Please consult teaching staff for any further, more specific requirements. 

NB The unit iLearn page will go live one week before commencement of the teaching session.

Unit Schedule

NB Lectures in bold = required. Other lectures = optional. All lectures are related to the subject of the unit (that is, women and gender in the ancient world).

Week 1

Required

Lecture 1: Introductory Lecture I (Prof. Peter Keegan)

Lecture 2: Introductory Lecture II: Ancient & Modern Disjunctions (Assoc. Prof. Lea Beness and Assoc. Prof. Tom Hillard)

Optional

Lecture 3: Some Modern Women on the Ancient World: Pioneering Women of Ancient World Studies (Assoc. Prof. Lea Beness)

Tutorial: There are no tutorials this week. Please take this opportunity to read the Unit Guide and explore the iLearn site. Perhaps listen to a podcast or two and/or check out the History of Women in Ancient World Studies blog!

Week 2

Required

Lecture 1: Women and Gender in the Ancient Near East (Assoc. Prof. Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides)

Lecture 2: Lecture 2: Gender and kinship in ancient Egypt and Nubia (Dr Julia Hamilton) 

Optional

Lecture 3: Her-story versus His-story: New Insights into Early Dynastic Egyptian Women (Ms Sue Kelly)

Lecture 4: Egyptian Child Burials (Prof. Ronika Power)

Tutorial: Introductory (no preparation required)

Week 3

Required

Lecture 1: Girls and girlhood in ancient Egypt and Nubia (Dr Julia Hamilton)

Lecture 2: Women rulers in ancient Egypt and Nubia: Hatshepsut to Amanitore (Dr Julia Hamilton)

Optional

Lecture 3: The Family in Ancient Egypt I (Prof. Naguib Kanawati)

Lecture 4: The Family in Ancient Egypt II (Prof. Naguib Kanawati)

Tutorial: Hatshepsut

Week 4

Required

Lecture 1: Gender and labour in ancient Egypt and Nubia (Dr Julia Hamilton)

Lecture 2: Sexuality and sensuality in ancient Egypt and Nubia (Dr Julia Hamilton)

Optional

Lecture 3: The Construction of Gender in Ancient Egyptian Visual Culture: Context, Principles and Decorum (Dr Alex Woods)

Lecture 4: Case Studies in Interpretation: Re-assessing the tomb of Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep at Saqqara and the mortuary temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari (Dr Alex Woods)

Tutorial: Women in Herodotus and Thucydides

Week 5

Required

Lecture 1: Women and Gender in the Aegean Bronze Age (Dr Susan Lupack)

Lecture 2: Women in the ‘Homeric’ and Archaic Greek Worlds: The Worlds of ‘Homer’, Hesiod, Semonides and Sappho (Assoc. Prof. Tom Hillard)

Tutorial: Euripides’ Medea

Week 6

Required

Lecture 1: Women in Homer (Ms Elizabeth Stockdale)

Lecture 2: Amazons (Assoc. Prof. Ian Plant)

Tutorial: Aristophanes’ Lysistrata and the Question of Women at the Theatre

Week 7

Required

Lecture 1: Images of Athenian Women and the Evidence I (Assoc. Prof. Lea Beness

Lecture 2: Images of Athenian Women and the Evidence II (Assoc. Prof. Lea Beness)

Tutorial: Xenophon and Attic Oratory

Week 8

Required

Lecture 1: Greek Sexuality I (Assoc. Prof. Ian Plant)

Lecture 2: Greek Sexuality II (Assoc. Prof. Ian Plant)

Tutorial: NO TUTORIALS THIS WEEK AS THE PODCAST IS DUE

Week 9:

Required

Lecture 1: Women in the Hellenistic Period (Assoc. Prof. Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides)

Lecture 2: Roman Women and the Roman Family (Part 1) (Assoc. Prof. Tom Hillard)

Tutorial: Sources on Roman Sexuality

Week 10

Required

Lecture 1: The Roman Family (Part 2) and Women in the Late Roman Republic (Prof. Peter Keegan)

Lecture 2: Colon(ial)izing Fulvia: (re)presenting the military woman in history, fiction, and art (Prof. Peter Keegan)

Tutorial: Ovid's Art of Love

Week 11

Required

Lecture 1: Cleopatra and Women in the Augustan Age (Prof. Peter Keegan)

Lecture 2: Representations of Roman Female Head-Covering Practices (Dr Liz Smith)

Tutorial: Sulpicia

Week 12

Required

Lecture 1: Imperial Women in the Principate (Livia to the Tetrarchy) (Dr Caillan Davenport)

Lecture 2: Women & Gender in Early Christianity I (Dr Chris Forbes)

Optional

Lecture 3: Women in the Roman Empire. Boudicca: Examining the Evidence (Prof. Peter Keegan)

Tutorial: Juvenal's Satire 6

Week 13

Required

Lecture 1: Women & Gender in Early Christianity II (Dr Chris Forbes)

Lecture 2: Byzantine Empresses (Dr Meaghan McEvoy)

Tutorial:: Jerome’s Letters

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Changes since First Published

Date Description
07/02/2023 Day of BLOG submission (from Friday to Sunday) Change of name for weekly learning activity (from Seminar to Tutorial) Inclusion of complete General Assessment Information

Unit information based on version 2023.01R of the Handbook