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The John Batchelor Show

6/8: The Missing Thread: A Women's History of the Ancient World Hardcover – July 30, 2024 by Daisy Dunn (Author)

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

Books, Society & Culture, News, Arts

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 19 October 2024

⏱️ 9 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

6/8: The Missing Thread: A Women's History of the Ancient World Hardcover – July 30, 2024 
by  Daisy Dunn  (Author)

https://www.amazon.com/Missing-Thread-Womens-History-Ancient/dp/0593299663

Around four thousand years ago, the mysterious Minoans sculpted statues of topless women with snakes slithering on their arms. Over one thousand years later, Sappho wrote great poems of longing and desire. For classicist Daisy Dunn, these womenwhether they were simply sitting at their looms at home or participating in the highest echelons of powerwere up to something much more interesting than other histories would lead us to believe. Together, these women helped to make antiquity as we know it.

In this monumental work, Dunn reconceives our understanding of the ancient world by emphasizing women's roles within it. The Missing Thread never relegates women to the sidelines and is populated with well-known names such as Cleopatra and Agrippina, as well as the likes of Achaemenid consort Atossa and Olympias, a force in Macedon. Spanning three thousand years, the story moves from Minoan Crete to Mycenaean Greece, from Lesbos to Asia Minor, from the Persian Empire to the royal court of Macedonia, and concludes with Rome and its growing empire. The women of antiquity are undeniably woven throughout the fabric of history, and in The Missing Thread they finally take center stage.

1896 Sappho

Transcript

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0:30.1

I'm John Baxter visiting with Daisy Dunn,

0:32.2

the author of The Missing

0:33.4

Fred, Women's History of the Ancient World.

0:36.6

These Romans all know the Greek stories.

0:39.3

They know the Greek drama.

0:40.6

The Greeks are very serious.

0:42.4

The Roman theater is nowhere near as serious. Rome likes

0:45.7

forests. Rome likes comedy. Caesar has comic moments, but not recently. Caesar defeats Pompey and Pompey runs to Egypt where his wife

0:57.9

tries to have a successful reunion with him however Pompey's murdered by a man who thinks he's under orders to

1:04.6

kill Pompey. Caesar mourns it, mourns Pompe's death, and then because he's

1:11.2

walked into Alexandria, which is the bread basket of the Mediterranean,

1:16.0

he's in a palace and someone brings in a rug.

...

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