Women in Prehistory (Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture)

by Margaret Ehrenberg

Paperback, 1990

Status

Available

Call number

305.4

Collection

Publication

University of Oklahoma Press (1990), Paperback, 208 pages

Description

   Social attitudes in our culture have led to the assumption that early advances in human knowledge were the achievements of men; the role of women in prehistoric times has been largely overlooked. In this thought-provoking book, however, Margaret Ehrenberg argues that the true contribution of women especially in the discovery and development of agriculture was much greater than has been acknowledged to date. Examining the evidence from archaeological, anthropological, and classical documentary sources, Ehrenberg throws new light on the lives of women and their social status in Europe from the Palaeolithic era to the Iron Age. The relationship between the role of women and economic production is a central theme of this survey. In Bronze Age and Iron Age societies individual women are seen to be in positions of power. Although available evidence is fragmentary and often controversial, Ehrenberg shows how information can be gathered from skeletons and grave goods found in burials, from settlement sites, from rock carvings and sculpted figurines, as well as from anthropological parallels, to enable significant inferences to be drawn about the life of prehistoric women.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member ddailey
The book labors a number of arguments theories and counter-arguments about women's roles in cultural evolution during prehistoric times. I'm not so much interested in that as in musing for myself on the discoveries mentioned in the book and the many illustrations and photos. A keeper for my
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Language

Physical description

208 p.; 1 inches

ISBN

0806122374 / 9780806122373

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