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Deciphering Female Figures in Greek Myth and Ritual
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14 February 2027
This volume investigates the central role of female agency in ancient Greek religion, challenging the long-held scholarly assumption that women were largely excluded from spaces of power and knowledge. While traditional urban histories suggest women were generally not permitted to access places where power was exercised, this work seeks to overturn these premises by demonstrating that women were not only active participants but often essential officiants within religious contexts.
The book's contributions build upon recent research to show that women possessed significant religious agency and access to sacred spaces across various ancient environments. By moving beyond traditional literary sources — which are often limited by the perspectives of male elites from dominant city-centers — the authors provide a more comprehensive picture of how women actually utilized public and sacred spaces. These traditional sources frequently render women invisible or highlight them only during extraordinary or transgressive events. This collection addresses a critical gap in scholarship where female use of religious space is still frequently overlooked due to a continued reliance on narrow, localized historical viewpoints.
Through unambiguous evidence, this collection offers a vital re-evaluation of gender and space in the Graeco-Roman world, making it an essential resource for historians and librarians seeking to update their collections with cutting-edge research on female religious authority.
Giulia Frigerio; Silvio Friedrich Bär, University of Oslo, Norway.