Routledge Handbook of Women and Ancient Greek Philosophy
Routledge Handbook of Women and Ancient Greek Philosophy
Brill, Sara; McKeen, Catherine
Taylor & Francis Ltd
03/2024
650
Dura
Inglês
9780367498719
15 a 20 dias
Sara Brill and Catherine McKeen
Part I: 700-400s BCE
2. The Way Up and Down: Liminal Agency in The Homeric Hymns and Presocratic Philosophy
Jessica Elbert Decker
3. Sappho of Lesbos and the Time of Erosophy
Chelsea C. Harry
Sex, Family, and Chthonic Justice: On the Cosmology of the Choephoroi - Kalliopi Nikolopoulou (SUNY Buffalo)
Euripides on "Women's Rights?" Natural Philosophy and Epistemic Justice in the Fragments of Melanippe Sophe and Desmotis - Dorota Dutsch (UC Santa Barbara)
On Not-Believing: A Gorgianic Reading of the Tragic Cassandra - Maria Cecilia de Miranda Nogueira Coelho (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais)
The Correctness of Grammatical Gender in the Sophistic Tradition - Chloe Balla (University of Crete)
II. 370s-340s BCE
Eis gynaikos andra: Aeschines on Women, Eros, and Politics- Francesca Pentassuglio (Sapienza University of Rome)
'By Zeus,' Said Theodote: Women as Interlocutors and Performers in Xenophon's Philosophical Writings - Carol Atack (University of Cambridge)
Women in Xenophon's Socratic Works - David M. Johnson (Southern Illinois University Carbondale)
Socrates' Laughing Bodies: Women and Comedy in Plato's Phaedo - Sonja Tanner (University of Colorado, Colorado Springs)
Plato's Argument for the Inclusion of Women in the Guardian Class: Prospects and Problems - Emily Hulme (University of Sydney)
Women, Spirit, and Authority in Plato and Aristotle - Patricia Marechal (University of California, San Diego)
Plato on Women and the Private Family- Rachel Singpurwalla (University of Maryland)
Plato's Scientific Feminism: Collection and Division in Republic V's "First Wave" - John Proios (University of Chicago) and Rachana Kamtekar (Cornell University)
Weaving Politics in Plato's Statesman - Jill Frank (Cornell University) and Sarah Greenberg (Cornell University)
Midwifery as Metaphor in Plato's Theaetetus - Marina Berzins McCoy (Boston College)
Divine Names and the Mystery of Diotima's Eponymy - Danielle Layne (Gonzaga University)
Sexual Differentiation and What it Means to be Human in Timaeus - Jill Gordon (Colby College)
III. 330s-320s BCE
Cyrenaics on Philosophical Education and Gender - Katharine R. O'Reilly (Toronto Metropolitan University)
Wives or Philosophers? Hipparchia and the Cynic Criticism of Gendered Economics - Malin Grahn-Wilder (University of Jyvaeskylae)
Diagnosing Aristotle's Sexism - Charlotte Witt (UNH)
Women in Ancient Medical Texts as Sources of Knowledge in Aristotle - Mariska Leunissen (University of North Carolina)
Aristotle's Hylomorphism Reconsidered Through Aristotle's Account of Generation - Adriel M. Trott (Wabash College)
The Role of the Female in Aristotle's Teleology of Reproduction - Ana Laura Edelhoff (University of Konstanz)
Aristotle on Women's Virtues - Sophia Connell (University of London)
What is wrong with women. Aristotle's paradigm of gender, and its anomalies - Giulia Sissa (UCLA)
IV. 320s BCE-400s CE
Pythagorean Women: An Example of Female Philosophical Protreptics- Caterina Pello (University of Geneva)
Women in Stoicism - Jula Wildberger (American University of Paris)
Pyrrhonian Skepticism on Gender and Virtue- Christiana Olfert (Tufts University)
The Reception of Diotima in Later Platonism: Clea, Sosipatra and Asclepigeneia - Crystal Addey (University College Cork)
The Place of Women in the Neoplatonic Schools - Alexandra Michalewski (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique)
The School of Hypatia and the Problem of the Gendered Soul - Aiste Celkyte (Leiden University)
V. Later receptions
The Worth of Women: the Reception of Ancient Debates in the Renaissance - Marguerite Deslauriers (McGill University)
Philosopher Queens and a Female Prospero(a): Plato's Republic and Shakespeare's Tempest - Arlene Saxonhouse (University of Michigan)
"Possessed, Magical, and Dangerous to Handle": Jane Harrison, Nietzsche, and the Maenad Chorus- Laura McClure (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Women's Work: Exploring a Transhistorical Tradition of Inquiry with W. E. B. Du Bois, Anna Julia Cooper, and Aristotle - Harriet Fertik (The Ohio State University)
Sarah Kofman: Socratic Lover - Paul Allen Miller (University of South Carolina)
What Does it Mean to Decolonially Ruminate on a Classic? Medea, Sethe, and la Llorona - Andres Fabian Henao Castro (University of Massachusetts Boston)
Eros, the Elusive? A Dialogue on Plato's Symposium, Diotima and Women in Ancient Philosophy - Mariana Ortega (Pennsylvania State University) and a companion
Sara Brill and Catherine McKeen
Part I: 700-400s BCE
2. The Way Up and Down: Liminal Agency in The Homeric Hymns and Presocratic Philosophy
Jessica Elbert Decker
3. Sappho of Lesbos and the Time of Erosophy
Chelsea C. Harry
Sex, Family, and Chthonic Justice: On the Cosmology of the Choephoroi - Kalliopi Nikolopoulou (SUNY Buffalo)
Euripides on "Women's Rights?" Natural Philosophy and Epistemic Justice in the Fragments of Melanippe Sophe and Desmotis - Dorota Dutsch (UC Santa Barbara)
On Not-Believing: A Gorgianic Reading of the Tragic Cassandra - Maria Cecilia de Miranda Nogueira Coelho (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais)
The Correctness of Grammatical Gender in the Sophistic Tradition - Chloe Balla (University of Crete)
II. 370s-340s BCE
Eis gynaikos andra: Aeschines on Women, Eros, and Politics- Francesca Pentassuglio (Sapienza University of Rome)
'By Zeus,' Said Theodote: Women as Interlocutors and Performers in Xenophon's Philosophical Writings - Carol Atack (University of Cambridge)
Women in Xenophon's Socratic Works - David M. Johnson (Southern Illinois University Carbondale)
Socrates' Laughing Bodies: Women and Comedy in Plato's Phaedo - Sonja Tanner (University of Colorado, Colorado Springs)
Plato's Argument for the Inclusion of Women in the Guardian Class: Prospects and Problems - Emily Hulme (University of Sydney)
Women, Spirit, and Authority in Plato and Aristotle - Patricia Marechal (University of California, San Diego)
Plato on Women and the Private Family- Rachel Singpurwalla (University of Maryland)
Plato's Scientific Feminism: Collection and Division in Republic V's "First Wave" - John Proios (University of Chicago) and Rachana Kamtekar (Cornell University)
Weaving Politics in Plato's Statesman - Jill Frank (Cornell University) and Sarah Greenberg (Cornell University)
Midwifery as Metaphor in Plato's Theaetetus - Marina Berzins McCoy (Boston College)
Divine Names and the Mystery of Diotima's Eponymy - Danielle Layne (Gonzaga University)
Sexual Differentiation and What it Means to be Human in Timaeus - Jill Gordon (Colby College)
III. 330s-320s BCE
Cyrenaics on Philosophical Education and Gender - Katharine R. O'Reilly (Toronto Metropolitan University)
Wives or Philosophers? Hipparchia and the Cynic Criticism of Gendered Economics - Malin Grahn-Wilder (University of Jyvaeskylae)
Diagnosing Aristotle's Sexism - Charlotte Witt (UNH)
Women in Ancient Medical Texts as Sources of Knowledge in Aristotle - Mariska Leunissen (University of North Carolina)
Aristotle's Hylomorphism Reconsidered Through Aristotle's Account of Generation - Adriel M. Trott (Wabash College)
The Role of the Female in Aristotle's Teleology of Reproduction - Ana Laura Edelhoff (University of Konstanz)
Aristotle on Women's Virtues - Sophia Connell (University of London)
What is wrong with women. Aristotle's paradigm of gender, and its anomalies - Giulia Sissa (UCLA)
IV. 320s BCE-400s CE
Pythagorean Women: An Example of Female Philosophical Protreptics- Caterina Pello (University of Geneva)
Women in Stoicism - Jula Wildberger (American University of Paris)
Pyrrhonian Skepticism on Gender and Virtue- Christiana Olfert (Tufts University)
The Reception of Diotima in Later Platonism: Clea, Sosipatra and Asclepigeneia - Crystal Addey (University College Cork)
The Place of Women in the Neoplatonic Schools - Alexandra Michalewski (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique)
The School of Hypatia and the Problem of the Gendered Soul - Aiste Celkyte (Leiden University)
V. Later receptions
The Worth of Women: the Reception of Ancient Debates in the Renaissance - Marguerite Deslauriers (McGill University)
Philosopher Queens and a Female Prospero(a): Plato's Republic and Shakespeare's Tempest - Arlene Saxonhouse (University of Michigan)
"Possessed, Magical, and Dangerous to Handle": Jane Harrison, Nietzsche, and the Maenad Chorus- Laura McClure (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Women's Work: Exploring a Transhistorical Tradition of Inquiry with W. E. B. Du Bois, Anna Julia Cooper, and Aristotle - Harriet Fertik (The Ohio State University)
Sarah Kofman: Socratic Lover - Paul Allen Miller (University of South Carolina)
What Does it Mean to Decolonially Ruminate on a Classic? Medea, Sethe, and la Llorona - Andres Fabian Henao Castro (University of Massachusetts Boston)
Eros, the Elusive? A Dialogue on Plato's Symposium, Diotima and Women in Ancient Philosophy - Mariana Ortega (Pennsylvania State University) and a companion