Chester Beatty Annual Lecture

This event has ended

Online, Wednesday 8th February

Dr Sara Parks (Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, St Francis Xavier University, Nova Scotia)

When it comes to ancient women’s lived experience, all we have are fragments. A scrap of a handwritten letter from mother to daughter, preserved two millennia in a fortuitously arid microclimate. A tiny metal amulet worn around the neck, bearing a rolled-up incantation to protect the wearer from menstrual pain. One or two verses, ignored by readers of the canonical gospels, implying that a woman may have personally bankrolled the earliest Jesus movement. Evidence for ancient women is virtually inaccessible compared to evidence for (elite) ancient men, but it is there if we are just willing to dig a little. Biologist Merlin Sheldrake talks about the methods for studying fungi being fundamentally different from those for studying animals and plants: “Microbial lives … buried in soil, were not accessible like the bristling charismatic aboveground world of the large. Imagination was required. There was no way around it” (Entangled Lives, 2020). A hermeneutic of imagination is exactly what Dr Sara Parks, historian of women and gender in antiquity, says is required when seeking to uncover the history of ancient women. Almost everything about them is lost, and what does reach down to us is heavily filtered through the perspectives of the few elite men that had access to textual production. Yet tantalising clues remain. Between the lines of texts are slippages that offer glimpses of women’s realities. By combining manuscripts with artefacts, we find that ancient women could be savvy in business, brutal in military expansion, fluid in gender, commanding religious leaders, and exquisite authors. Bring your historical imagination and join Sara Parks in a tour of lost stories of ancient women.


Date:
Wednesday 8th February
Time:
6.00pm
Price:
Free - Registration required
Address:
Dame St, Dublin 2, Co. Dublin, Ireland

Google Map of Dame St, Dublin 2, Co. Dublin, Ireland

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE...

What's on

‘Next Gen – Now’ Event for Teens

The Wood Quay Venue

Calling all teens! Register for 'Next Gen – Now' to talk to local changemakers about fast fashion and take the confusion out of fast fashion Hosted by Dublin City Council in collaboration with Dublin City Comhairle na nÓg, this event provides an exciting opportunity to see local businesses promoting our world for the better, and for you to get the chance to talk to local changemakers about fast fashion. Think about the clothes you wear, how long have you owned them, where did you buy them, where were they made? In your community, are there any groups who try to make your area mo

What's on

Dublin City Council Bram Stoker Festival

Various Locations

From Friday 31 October to Monday 3 November, Dublin hosts the Bram Stoker Festival, a four-day celebration of gothic arts and culture inspired by the legacy of the city’s most famous author. The festival transforms the city into a theatrical landscape filled with parades, performances, screenings, music, storytelling and family-friendly activities. Events take place in public spaces and venues across Dublin. Programme Highlights: The Macnas Parade, titled An Treun: The Summoning of the Lost, takes place on Sunday 2 November. This new spectacle weaves through the North East Inner City,

What's on

Samhain in South Dublin

Two Haunted Locations: • Tallaween: Tallaght – Parthalán Place, October 31st • Spookdalkin: Clondalkin – The Round Tower Step into the shadows this Halloween and join us for a spine-tingling day of frightful fun! What’s Haunting Our Event: Creepy Cinema ,two runs of Halloween themed movies to chill your bones with popcorn and candyfloss on site Mischievous Entertainers bringing spooky surprises Zombies on the prowl beware as they wander through the crowds! Fiery Spectacle dare to watch our jaw-dropping fire performers Sensory Friendly Area open from 11am –