This article revisits the issue of female choruses in Classical Athens and aims to provide an alternative to the common pessimistic view that emphasizes the restriction of female choreia by the gender ideology of the democracy. We agree that Athens did not have the kind of female choral culture that is documented for Sparta or Argos, but a review of the evidence suggests that women did dance regularly both in the city itself and elsewhere in Attica, although not at the ideologically most marked occasions such as the City Dionysia. The latter part of the article turns from actual choruses to their representation in textual and iconographic sources. An important reason why modern scholarship sometimes underestimates the extent of female choreia in Athens, we suggest, is that Athenian sources are often purposefully elusive in their representation of female choruses.
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October 2015
Research Article|
October 01 2015
Another Look at Female Choruses in Classical Athens
F. Budelmann
;
F. Budelmann
Magdalen College, University of Oxford felix.budelmann@classics.ox.ac.uk
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T. Power
Classical Antiquity (2015) 34 (2): 252–295.
Citation
F. Budelmann, T. Power; Another Look at Female Choruses in Classical Athens. Classical Antiquity 1 October 2015; 34 (2): 252–295. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/ca.2015.34.2.252
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