Substitute mothers and female Jobs. Wet nurses and nannies in ancient Rome
2016-07-31
This paper argues that insufficient attention has been paid to the cultural construction of motherhood in ancient Greco-Roman societies. For this reason the author proposes an approach to the maternal care pro-vided by nurses in Roman elite families. This role was provided by women of low status who could obtain a certain social recognition. The paper argues that these women were responsible for the emotional wellbeing of children, which is the central core of motherhood. Effectively this meant that the biological mother pla-yed a secondary role in bringing up her children. As the author emphasized, this is a notable deviation from the conventional stereotypical relation between the mother and child presented in the idealized Roman texts.
Capítulo o parte de libro
Versión publicada
Castellano
Dones -- Història -- Fins al 500; Dones -- Treball - Fins al 500
129-138 p.
Institut Català d’Arqueologia Clàssica
Delgado, A., & Picazo, M. (2016). Los trabajos de las mujeres en el mundo antiguo: cuidado y mantenimiento de la vida. Institut Català d'Arqueologia Clàssica. https://doi.org/10.51417/hicetnunc_08
Hic et nunc; 08
Reconeixement-No comercial-Sense obra derivada 3.0
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