1. Aspasia and Feminism in Ancient Greece
Xanthippe, Socrates's wife, was one of the few women who didn't fit into this mold, and stood out as a "shrew" for often shouting at Socrates and berating him publicly.2 However, she was an expectation to the norm, alongside a group of foreign-born, well educated, courtesan woman, called hetaerae, that were paid to accompany men to places that other woman were not permitted to attend.3 Aspasia became the most famous and influential of the hetaerae. ... For example, Xenophon mentions Aspasia in two of his writings about Socrates, the Memorabilia and in Oeconomicus. ... She b...
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