This book is a study of the woman-and-child motif - known as the kourotrophos - as it appeared in the Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean. Stephanie Lynn Budin argues that, contrary to many current beliefs, the image was not a universal symbol of maternity or a depiction of a mother goddess. In most of the ancient world, kourotrophic iconography was relatively rare in comparison to other images of women and served a number of different symbolic functions, ranging from honoring the king of Egypt to adding strength to magical spells to depicting scenes of daily life. This work provides an in-depth examination of ancient kourotrophoi and engages with a variety of debates that they have spawned, including their role in the rise of patriarchy and what they say about ancient constructions of gender.
Disco reigns and hippies rule in Tales From The Bronze Age. Underground oddities from the 60s to 70s, including Snappy Sammy Smoot, Doc Destiny, Arnold Peck, Whiz Kids, Didi Glitz, Ma Cow, Buns...
This is the life story about a little girl from Scotland who was born into poverty. She had many traumatic and harrowing experiences along the way. She overcame them all and rose to become a top...