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I am hardly one who would normally consider myself an expert on gender studies, nor am I well versed in the appropriate theory. I have often said there are certain areas of study where logic seems to fly out the window and this is certainly one of them β assumptions are made not exclusively by male scholars I should add β about how women would have behaved, their importance or influence in ancient life, and their ability to have agency.
In my work on Pompeii, I have encountered this time and again in regards to funerary commemoration, the epigraphic record, especially in regards to the ability or to read and write graffiti , and in political engagement to name just a few areas. Take, for example, Naevoleia Tyche, a woman I wrote about extensively in my first book. She and her husband have two separate tombs on opposite sides of the city. Except if you crawl around the back careful β brambles!
Add in the award of a civic honour to the husband, and the interpretation changes entirely. She is not a dissatisfied upwardly mobile bitch: her husband probably honoured an agreement with his friend in building the first tomb, and then the other was built to include his new honours and establish a more substantial and yes, status grabbing monument for their heirs.
It is impossible to know, but the assumption, which is more likely than not based on more modern ideas about women and wealth, remains nonetheless. And this irks me. In the back of my mind somewhere there is, therefore, this sort of constant niggling thought about how to do better when it comes to presenting the women of antiquity, and I admit I have struggled at times to do it as I would like, both in my research and my teaching.
Occasionally though, there are moments in research where you have a half formed idea about a theory or an approach, and then you come across something that helps it all fall into place.