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Teaching Latin with a Feminist Consciousness

Now, what happens when we realize this, attaining what I call a "feminist consciousness," and we go back to the history and culture we are teaching? We begin to realize that "adding" women to materials we have will not work, that the whole structure of what we are teaching has to be changed in order that the central place of women in history and culture is affirmed. This will mean examining closely the contributions women have made to the world, and giving these women and their contributions a central place in our account of human history and culture. It will also mean examining closely the exclusion of women from areas of political, economic, and intellectual power and giving the story of this exclusion from power on the basis of gender a central place in our account of human history and culture.

This necessary re-writing of every period of human history is now taking place; the contribution of feminism is and will continue to transform the making of history. It is making a great impact on Classical Studies. Please read Barbara McManus' fascinating book, Classics and Feminism, for a feminist history of the field and for a sense of how the field has already been changed. Are we willing to be a part of this enterprise? If we are, we might begin to ask questions such as the following about what we are teaching:

  • Where were women? What were women doing? What were women not doing, and why? What do we know about real women at this time, and how do we know it?
  • What ideas about women were expressed in religion, literature, and art?
  • How do ancient ideas about women, preserved mostly in the writings of men, compare with what we know of the lives of real women at this time?

One chapter dealing with these questions will not do. These questions must be asked about every topic that we teach. They must be made central.

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Ad Astra: Using Latin in a Cross-curricular Science Program

Classics as a Cross-Curricular Core in the Middle School with CTCWeb as the Technological Foundation

Knowledge Builders
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Teachers' Companions
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Other Resources
Homepage of Barbara McManus

The Creation of Patriarchy by
Gerda Lerner

Essays on the Lives of Roman Women

Diotima: Materials for the Study of Women and Gender in the Ancient World

The Horace Project

Global Glossary Terms
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