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Teaching Latin with a Feminist Consciousness

These questions are of two kinds, both of which are important. We might be tempted, with our tendency to organize all our endeavors in Classics around certain canonical literary texts written by men, to focus on ideas about women and ignore questions about real women. I feel that we need to focus on both kinds of questions, and that looking both at ideas about and lives of women will lead to richer and deeper understanding of the texts we read and the period we study.

Also, we need to continue to look at the texts we study and consider bringing new ones into prominence. We have all seen refreshing additions to the high school Latin curriculum that used to be limited to a sequence of grammar, Caesar, Cicero, and Vergil. Especially exciting have been the changes in the AP Curriculum which allow for a wider variety of authors. And Judith Hallett's essay in the book Feminist Theory and the Classics makes a persuasive case for reading more Propertius and more texts from the post-Augustan period. I would go further and suggest that we take a careful look at women writers in Latin, not only the few poems of Sulpicia that we possess, but also the seldom read works of abbesses and elite women of the Middle Ages especially in the ninth and tenth centuries of the Common Era, when spaces were provided and some women were encouraged to pursue intellectual work.

We must be careful to remember that the addition of simply mythological and legendary women into the curriculum will not provide the necessary gender balance. Classical mythology and legends reveal some interesting ideas about women, both positive and negative. They do not reveal real women.

Now that I have discussed some of the feminist work that is currently being done in Classics and will continue to need to be done, I would like to turn to beginner's Latin textbooks, keeping in mind the need to move women alongside men to the center of our thought.

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