When the comparison is made about the life of women in ancient Roma author Gillian Clark’s description of Roman Women far outweighs those made, by Helen E. Wieand, due to the process of informing her audience. Clark, introduces’ the very first stages of what it meant to be a women in ancient Rome from the early years of life, to their midlife, and lastly the average age of expectancy. While Wieand describes the roman women with a sense of bias since only women involved with the upper class or high marital status are mentioned throughout her article. Therefore Gillian Clark’s article, “Roman Women” better depicts the struggles of being inferior due to a mere basis of gender, to the socially and political endeavors that degraded women during ancient
When the comparison is made about the life of women in ancient Roma author Gillian Clark’s description of Roman Women far outweighs those made, by Helen E. Wieand, due to the process of informing her audience. Clark, introduces’ the very first stages of what it meant to be a women in ancient Rome from the early years of life, to their midlife, and lastly the average age of expectancy. While Wieand describes the roman women with a sense of bias since only women involved with the upper class or high marital status are mentioned throughout her article. Therefore Gillian Clark’s article, “Roman Women” better depicts the struggles of being inferior due to a mere basis of gender, to the socially and political endeavors that degraded women during ancient