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Women, Philosophy, and Violence
Women, Philosophy, and Violence

Author(s): ANA OCOLEANU
Subject(s): Eastern Orthodoxy
Published by: Editura Eikon
Keywords: women philosopher; St. Catherine; Hypathia from Alexandria; Christianity; Hellenism; Platonism; martyrdom; violence

Summary/Abstract: What does it mean to be a female philosopher in late antiquity? This is the question that concerns us in this study and which I try to solve by referring to two personalities from Alexandria (IV-V century): St. Catherine and Hypatia. Although they are very well known, both in the Christian environment and in the world of profane sciences and the arts, the two philosophers from Alexandria share a common destiny: their works have not been preserved, although their fame has reached today; they were rather seen as exceptions of the female gender, with implicit misogyny, and had a violent end. Being a female philosopher, even in the emancipated Alexandria of late antiquity, was a risky undertaking.

  • Issue Year: 7/2024
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 53-61
  • Page Count: 9
  • Language: English
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