Skip to main content
Princeton Mobile homeCourses home
Detail

Women, Writing, Greece: From Sappho to Virginia Woolf and Beyond

CLA 229/COM 230/GSS 234/HLS 229

1244
Info tab content
This course explores the history of engagement by women writers and artists with the place, idea, and myths of Greece. We first read ancient female writers, preeminently Sappho, and examine the representation of women in ancient texts; we then trace the strategies through which "Greece" allows later women writers to assert their authority and authorship, question gender hierarchies and political/sociocultural paradigms, and lay a claim to the classical tradition. We consider how ancient writing affects contemporary understandings of identity and gender, and how modern works, from novels to plays to films, shape our view of the ancient world.
Instructors tab content
Sections tab content

Section C01