Optima tu proprii nominis auctor: The Semantics of Female Authorship in Ancient Rome, from Sulpicia to Proba
Hauser, E
Date: 15 December 2016
Journal
Eugesta
Publisher
Université de Lille
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Abstract
This paper explores evidence for female authorship terminology in extant poetic
texts written in Latin by women. It begins by first considering male authorship in Latin
literature, before moving on to three case studies of women’s writing: an elegy by Sulpicia,
an anonymous graffito from Pompeii, and the Virgilian cento of Proba. ...
This paper explores evidence for female authorship terminology in extant poetic
texts written in Latin by women. It begins by first considering male authorship in Latin
literature, before moving on to three case studies of women’s writing: an elegy by Sulpicia,
an anonymous graffito from Pompeii, and the Virgilian cento of Proba. By foregrounding
the ‘subversive mask’ of female poetic speech in Rome, the paper uncovers a subtextual
rhetoric of authorship where female poets both respond to and subvert male authorship
paradigms. It thus argues for the importance of analyzing authorship terminology in Latin
literature through the lens of gender.
Classics, Ancient History, Religion and Theology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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