Economies of weaving : women, labor, and textiles at Morgantina from the bronze age to the republican era

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
Textiles were everywhere in antiquity and their production was remarkably labor intensive. Textile labor was also one of the only productive activities which was explicitly gendered as women's work. In this dissertation, I investigate how women's labor was mobilized and allocated for textile manufacture, focusing in particular on the household as a central locus of production and consumption. The archaeological site of Morgantina in east-central Sicily serves as my primary case study. The site is especially apt for this analysis because of its unique collection of over 2,000 textile tools, well-documented excavation history dating back almost 70 years, and long span of habitation. Textile tools have been recovered in contexts dating to all major periods at the site from the Early Bronze Age (ca. 2400--1600 BC) through the Republican era (2nd and 1st centuries BC). The wide chronological span of these artifacts affords the opportunity to connect long-term changes with broader sociopolitical and economic phenomena. This study makes three main contributions. First, I utilize the vast archive of notebooks and drawings from previous excavations at Morgantina to date a sizable number of textile tools recovered at the site. The result is a sequence of artifacts spanning two millennia which both demonstrates broad continuities in the technologies used for spinning and weaving, and also identifies important moments of innovation. Second, I offer a new methodology for studying textile tools which combines the close analysis of archaeological context with recently developed techniques for reconstructing production possibilities. Lastly, I draw on these historical and methodological insights to track changes in the socioeconomic organization of textile manufacture. My findings call into question pervasive narratives in the field of economic history which focus on population growth and urbanization as the prime movers of craft specialization. In place of these narratives, I foreground an array of neglected factors—such as gender, the structure of the household, dependence on enslaved labor, the use of coinage, and political formations—which were pivotal in promoting and constraining specialization in antiquity.

Description

Type of resource text
Form electronic resource; remote; computer; online resource
Extent 1 online resource.
Place California
Place [Stanford, California]
Publisher [Stanford University]
Copyright date 2023; ©2023
Publication date 2023; 2023
Issuance monographic
Language English

Creators/Contributors

Author Ennis, Kevin
Degree supervisor Saller, Richard
Degree supervisor Trimble, Jennifer
Thesis advisor Saller, Richard
Thesis advisor Trimble, Jennifer
Thesis advisor Ceserani, Giovanna
Thesis advisor Gleba,Margarita
Thesis advisor Walthall,Denton Alex
Degree committee member Ceserani, Giovanna
Degree committee member Gleba,Margarita
Degree committee member Walthall,Denton Alex
Associated with Stanford University, School of Humanities and Sciences
Associated with Stanford University, Department of Classics

Subjects

Genre Theses
Genre Text

Bibliographic information

Statement of responsibility Kevin Ennis.
Note Submitted to the Department of Classics.
Thesis Thesis Ph.D. Stanford University 2023.
Location https://purl.stanford.edu/mv936rn0075

Access conditions

Copyright
© 2023 by Kevin Ennis
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC).

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