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Abstract
Searching for Professional Women in the Mid to Late Roman Textile Industry
March 13, 2023  

Author

Anna C Kelley

Abstract

Since the 1960s, feminist historiography has been hard at work challenging established narratives of womens roles in past societies, although with greater impact in some disciplines than others. Studies of production in the ancient world, in particular, continue to exclude women from discussions of professional labour. When women do appear in texts, modern scholarship has tended to treat them either as exceptional cases, or as part of an unskilled, casual workforce. Utilizing a variety of source materials, particularly Egyptian papyri, this article examines womens labour in the mid to late Roman textile industry, which in recent historiography has typically been relegated to the category of domestic production. Drawing upon a comparative model for womens manufacturing roles in the Middle Ages to highlight important distinctions between womens roles and their documentation in manufacturing between time periods, it becomes evident that Roman women were crucial actors at all stages of commercial textile production, although they possessed limited levels of control within the industry. Establishing women within the better-evidenced Roman textile sector, despite legal and social norms that historically obscured them, opens the possibility of finding professional women in other industries in the ancient world, and continues the process of re-evaluating the economic history of women throughout the ages.

Published on Past & Present, Volume 258, Issue 1, February 2023, Pages 343.

Access

Open access and free to download

https://academic.oup.com/past/article/258/1/3/6652269


   

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