Alexander, Hellenistic women and Olympias

This moderated forum is for discussion of Alexander the Great. Inappropriate posts will be deleted without warning. Examples of inappropriate posts are:
* The Greek/Macedonian debate
* Blatant requests for pre-written assignments by lazy students - we don't mind the subtle ones ;-)
* Foul or inappropriate language

Moderator: pothos moderators

User avatar
amyntoros
Somatophylax
Posts: 2188
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2003 2:51 pm
Location: New York City

Re: Alexander, Hellenistic women and Olympias (continued)

Post by amyntoros »

This is so funny, Alexander. I haven't convinced you of Alexander's part in the general phenomenon, yet you agree with Marcus' two previous posts. Now, I *never* said that there was any proactive work on Alexander's part, however, I was the one who originally mentioned the men fighting in Asia, etc., and the effect that this had on the women's role at home. So, in effect, Marcus is agreeing with me!Is it the way that I say it???:-)Amyntoros
Amyntoros

Pothos Lunch Room Monitor
ancientlibrary
Pezhetairos (foot soldier)
Posts: 218
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2005 2:37 am

Confused

Post by ancientlibrary »

I'm confused now who's saying what.As for the women staying at home, I want to see the evidence for social changes. Yes, it accords with examples from other periods (eg., WWII, although that snapped back quick), but I still know of no evidence how changed society in Macedonia. This is a toughie, of course. There isn't much evidence at all...1c. and Egyptian evidence doesn't strike me as meaning much in this debate. These are more than a few social changes away from early 4c. Macedonia, ie. physical transplantation with all the tie-breaking this entails, alient cultural environment, disparities in the ratio of men/women, etc.
User avatar
marcus
Somatophylax
Posts: 4871
Joined: Fri Aug 16, 2002 7:27 am
Location: Nottingham, England
Has thanked: 45 times
Been thanked: 3 times

Re: Confused

Post by marcus »

Hi Tim,I'm getting confused, too, but that's because I didn't really pay attention at the start of the thread, and leaped in only later.I'm not sure how far I agree or disagree that 1st century evidence isn't any good. For a start, the fact that there is evidence (irrespective of the quantity or quality, for the time being) indicates that the change has already taken place. Second, social, cultural and indeed political change can take a looooong time, not least because it happens at different rates in different parts of society. (Hey, it took nearly 100 years to get universal *male* suffrage in England, before one even starts to think about female suffrage. And it too hundreds of years for women of a certain class in England to see work as something that they could conceivably do ... yet women from lower classes had been working for centuries.)So I don't see that 1st century evidence (or even Egyptian, perhaps) is of no, or limited use. It's the quantity and quality that is more pertinant.ATBMarcus
Marcus
Sine doctrina vita est quasi mortis imago
At Amazon US
At Amazon UK
User avatar
amyntoros
Somatophylax
Posts: 2188
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2003 2:51 pm
Location: New York City

Re: Confused

Post by amyntoros »

Well, while chatting with my Prof last night I mentioned this thread. (He currently can't read the Pothos forum - some supposedly expunged virus on his computer has reduced the Pothos pages to minuscule type.) He said to me that it sounds like an interesting thesis. And that's the root of the problem right now - this does feel like it's turning into a thesis, and if I'm to be convincing then I need to spend hours on research and I don't have the time to spare because of my other studies. I'll pick up the thread later, I promise, either here or on your Wiki. In the meantime, my Pothos contributions will have to consist of anything that doesn't involve trips to the library or hours on the web. :-)Best regards,Amyntoros
Amyntoros

Pothos Lunch Room Monitor
abm
Pezhetairos (foot soldier)
Posts: 248
Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2004 2:38 pm

Re: Alexander, Hellenistic women and Olympias (continued)

Post by abm »

Hi LindaThe discussion has been going too long now to remember who said what, but if you've said that, i guess we partly agree on some points although it is hard for anyone here to make her/his case, lacking time to spend hours in the library on it. If you'll pick up this thread later, I'll certainly be interested in continuing the discussion.regards,abm
User avatar
marcus
Somatophylax
Posts: 4871
Joined: Fri Aug 16, 2002 7:27 am
Location: Nottingham, England
Has thanked: 45 times
Been thanked: 3 times

Re: Alexander, Hellenistic women and Olympias (continued)

Post by marcus »

I think it's a very interesting discussion, but the intrinsic problem with a forum like this is that one never has the time to do all the work and research that's needed ... Amyntoros really needs to write a 25 page thesis and give everyone else a month or two to 'reply' to it :-)I would bet money that bits of this discussion will creep in to other threads for months, now! :-)ATBMarcus
Marcus
Sine doctrina vita est quasi mortis imago
At Amazon US
At Amazon UK
Post Reply