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Growing Up Fatherless in Antiquity

  • Edited by: Sabine R. Hübner, Columbia University, New York
  • Edited by: David M. Ratzan, Columbia University, New York
  • Hardback
  • ISBN:9780521490504
  • Publication date:February 2009
  • 350pages
      • Dimensions: 228 x 152 mm
      • Weight: 0.7kg
        65.0097805214905040GB0en_GBGBP£

      As the changes in the traditional family accelerated toward the end of the twentieth century, a great deal of attention came to focus on fathers, both modern and ancient. While academics and politicians alike singled out the conspicuous and growing absence of the modern father as a crucial factor affecting contemporary family and social dynamics, ancient historians and classicists have rarely explored ancient father-absence, despite the likelihood that nearly a third of all children in the ancient Mediterranean world were fatherless before they turned fifteen. The proportion of children raised by single mothers, relatives, step-parents, or others was thus at least as high in antiquity as it is today. This 2009 book assesses the wide-ranging impact high levels of chronic father-absence had on the cultures, politics, and families of the ancient world.

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