“Stai Zitta!”: Women in Italy Between Past and Present | Lecture

Saturday, Oct 12, 2024 3 – 4 pm

500 N. Michigan Ave, Ste 1450, Chicago, IL 60611

Lecture

Prof. Stefania Santelia of University of Bari ‘Aldo Moro’ will lead a discussion – based on the reading of Latin sources translated both in English and in Italian – on the most praised feminine virtues in the Roman world: chastity, dedication to husband and children, frugality, industriousness, obedience, and above all, the ability to remain silent.

The condition of women in Rome must be considered in light of both the reality of the Roman familia and the prerogatives of the pater familias (who had power of life and death over wife, children, and slaves) and the restrictions imposed on women: the prohibition of participating in political life, of drinking wine, inheriting, or managing their own assets, of deciding whether to carry a pregnancy to term or “to delay childbirth” (to have an abortion, as the Romans said).

The conversation will also initiate a deeper reflection on women’s “achievements” in Italy: the recognition of an equal position within the family; access to the judiciary and military careers, the possibility of terminating a pregnancy, the abrogation of the so-called ‘honor killing’ and of ‘reparative marriage’; the right to vote.

Free with registration.