S1E9: In Her Own Words: Ancient Women Authors

 
 

With Dr. Kate Cooper

In the penultimate episode of Season 1, our podcast hosts talk with historian and classicist Dr. Kate Cooper about those rare surviving moments when ancient women wrote for themselves. 

The famous Greek poet Sappho, who wrote of love and loss. Faltonia Betitia Proba, the elite Roman woman who adapted Virgil to tell Christian history. The pilgrim Egeria who described her tour of the Holy Lands to her circle of female friends back home. And of course we revisit Perpetua, the martyr from Carthage whom we met in Episode 0.

 
The idea of letters by women is perceived to be anomalous and problematic, and there’s a kind of regularization that happens. I think that gives us a little bit of insight as to why we have so little material that’s come down to us under the names of women.
— Dr. Kate Cooper


BIO

Dr. Kate Cooper is Professor of History at Royal Holloway, University of London. She received her PhD from Princeton University in 1993, after degrees from Wesleyan University and Harvard University. Her work is wide-ranging. She has written on late antique Christianity, women and the ancient Roman household, religious conflict and violence, and martyrdom.

Her books include Band of Angels: The Forgotten World of Early Christian Women (2013), The Virgin and the Bride: Idealized Womanhood in Late Antiquity (1996), The Fall of the Roman Household (2007), and her forthcoming Queens of a Fallen World: The Lost Women of Augustine’s Confessions (April 2023). She often provides expert commentary for the BBC, CNN, and National Geographic.

 
 

Episode Cover Art

This Roman fresco (sometimes referred to as “Sappho”) depicts a richly dressed, anonymous woman in a thoughtful pose. Strikingly, she is equipped with the tools of a writer: a stylus and tablet. 

Credit: Fresco of woman with tablets and stylus, Pompeii. Ca. 50–79 CE. Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli, accession number 9084. Image from Wikimedia Commons.

 

Women Who Went Before is written, produced, and edited by Rebekah Haigh and Emily Chesley. The music is composed and produced by Moses Sun.

Sponsored by the Center for Culture, Society, and Religion, the Program in Judaic Studies, and the Stanley J. Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies at Princeton University

Views expressed on the podcast are solely those of the individuals, and do not represent Princeton University.

 
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S1E10: Out of Pandora’s Box, Recovering Hope

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S1E8: Suffering Witches to Live: Jewish Women and the Legacies of Religious Law