Let's Talk About Myths, Baby! | Greek Mythology & the Ancient Mediterranean

RE-AIR: Conversations: How Women Became Poets, Gender History in Greek Literature w/ Emily Hauser

Dec 26, 2025
Emily Hauser, a distinguished Classics scholar and author, shares her insights on women in Greek literature and gender history. She discusses her book, How Women Became Poets, highlighting the absence of a feminine term for 'poet' and the cultural silencing of figures like Sappho. Emily explores how male poetic identity has overshadowed women's voices and the strategies women employed to embed their perspectives in ancient texts. She critiques misogyny in poetry and provides a sneak peek into her upcoming work, Mythica/Penelope's Bones, focusing on Bronze Age women.
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ANECDOTE

Writing Novels During A PhD

  • Emily wrote novels during her PhD to make classics accessible and prove she could do both fiction and deep philology.
  • She kept the novels secret from her advisor until she had a deal to avoid academic judgment.
INSIGHT

No Word For Woman Poet Until Much Later

  • Greek lacked a feminine word for "poet" until the fourth century, revealing deliberate linguistic exclusion.
  • Emily Hauser argues this absence helped shape the male-dominated idea of who counts as a poet.
INSIGHT

Nightingale Fable Silences Female Song

  • Hesiod's nightingale fable shows a female singer silenced and described with a masculine poetic term.
  • Hauser reads this as linguistic and cultural proof that poetic authority was being gendered male.
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