CAL Department of Comparative Cultural Studies
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  • Faculty News: Art History Professor Dr. Alexandra Carpino will present her research in Etruscan motherhood myths on March 5, 2021

Faculty News: Art History Professor Dr. Alexandra Carpino will present her research in Etruscan motherhood myths on March 5, 2021

Posted by Rebekah Pratt-Sturges on March 1, 2021

On March 5, 5 PM [EST] – so 3 PM here in Arizona), Professor of Art History Dr. Alexandra Carpino will give a Zoom talk on the Etruscans’ motherhood myths for the AIA’s Baltimore Society – you are welcome to join! The link is available here: https://www.archaeological.org/…/lecture-5-tba-baltimore/ 

Normative concepts about gender were communicated in the Etruscan domestic sphere, specifically in aristocratic households, through narratives that decorated the reverses of engraved bronze mirrors. These artifacts were more than just expensive luxury items and grooming implements; rather, they also functioned as a form of communication in the private sphere, thereby providing scholars with a critical body of evidence about the elite’s gender ideologies, social expectations and cultural values. Exercising agency, engravers and their patrons gravitated toward stories from the Hellenic repertoire that were relevant both to their lives and the ideologies that underscored the cornerstones of aristocratic Etruscan society. In this lecture, I focus on scenes that communicated elite expectations about motherhood, a subject popular in mirror iconography from the fifth through third centuries BCE. Two themes prevail, one proclaiming the intimate bond between mothers and their children during life and/or in the aftermath of tragedy, and the second focusing on moments rife with hostility and violence, where mothers exhibit behaviors that transgress established ideals. By comparing and contrasting these narratives – all directed to an educated clientele – we can better understand the different types of exempla offered up for reflection on a daily basis. More specifically, the representations reveal a particular focus on procreative women who had given birth to male children, thereby highlighting the centrality of the male line in contemporary families’ ancestries and lineages. Through this privileging of boys over girls, mirror iconography exposes the gender stereotypes in circulation at this time.

Filed Under: Art History, Faculty Research

Department of Comparative Cultural Studies
Location
Room 104 Main Office Building 15
Riles
317 W Tormey Dr.
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 6031
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Email
ComparativeCulturalStudies@nau.edu
Phone
928-523-3881
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