: Use the sourcebook's sections on medical and philosophical views to discuss how the female body was conceptualized and often deemed "inferior" to the male standard. Women in Ancient Greece: A Sourcebook

: Focus on how religious life offered women a rare public platform, such as the office of the priestess or participation in specific female-only festivals.

: Discuss how the sourcebook highlights that ancient texts—literary, legal, and philosophical—originate primarily from men who either idealized or dismissed women, thereby controlling the historical narrative.

: Who often had more social freedom or professional standing than wives.

: Contrast the "lived experiences" of real women (domestic work, property rights, religion) with their portrayals on the Athenian stage or in Homeric epics.

: Particularly the contrast between secluded Athenian women and the more physically active Dorian (Spartan) girls.

: Examine the varying roles of women based on status, such as:

The book by Bonnie MacLachlan (2012) is a primary resource compilation designed to explore the lives of girls and women in ancient Greek society from the Archaic through the Hellenistic periods.

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