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At the heart of this volume are three trials held in Athens in the
fourth century BCE. The defendants were all women and in each case the
charges involved a combination of ritual activities. Two were
condemned to death. Because of the brevity of the ancient sources, and
their lack of agreement, the precise charges are unclear, and the
reasons for taking these women to court remain mysterious.
_Envy, Poison, and Death_ takes the complexity and confusion of the
evidence not as a a riddle to be solved, but as revealing multiple
social dynamics. It explores the changing factors—material,
ideological, and psychological—that may have provoked these events.
It focuses in particular on the dual role of envy (_phthonos_) and
gossip as processes by which communities identified people and
activities that were dangerous, and examines how and why those local,
even individual, dynamics may have come to shape official civic
decisions during a time of perceived hardship.
At first sight so puzzling, these trials reveal a vivid picture of the
socio-political environment of Athens during the early-mid fourth
century BCE, including responses to changes in women's status and
behaviour, and attitudes to ritual activities within the city. The
volume reveals some of the characters, events, and even emotions that
would help to shape an emergent concept of magic: it suggests that the
boundary of acceptable behaviour was shifting, not only within the
legal arena but also through the active involvement of society beyond
the courts.
Les mer
Women on Trial in Classical Athens
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191068911
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter