Have you ever watched Mean Girls? The movie with Lindsay Lohan where she meets “the mean girls” of her school? There’s one girl that she meets which is the head of the group, really pretty, blonde, obsessed with being the hottest one and having no competition, her name was Regina George. Aphrodite is like the Regina George of the goddesses. She’s really pretty, well that’s about the only description I can give you because she can be whatever your definition of beautiful is. She’s was like the Beyonce of her time. She can make anything work and everyone is just obsessed with her. She also had a really bad temper when she didn’t get her way or when they didn’t do what she’d say. Aphrodite in a way is like the kind of girl you wished you were
Aphrodite has two sides of being an eminent goddess. One side is the “ideal of female grace and beauty” where on the outside was a radiant goddess completely flawless (APHRODITE). The darker side of this goddess was her personality that was described as “ill-tempered” and “easily offended,” this demonstrated her being easily
The Greeks popularized the importance of beauty in society. Aphrodite’s image became the primary source of inspiration for what beautiful should look like and what was socially accepted in Greek society as beautiful. Aphrodite was a huge influence on the portrayal of women in Ancient Greece, high social status and poor people alike. There were stories of what she looked like from folktales people told and her image was sculpted for all to see. She was, in fact, the most sculpted and pictured god/goddess in all of ancient Greek mythology. “Her eyes were as blue as the summer sky overhead, her skin as fair as the white sea-foam from which she came, and her hair as golden as the yellow rays of the setting sun. When she stepped from the water upon
Stemming from a desired standpoint, Aphrodite, a gorgeous, perpetual young woman with a beautiful body is known as the goddess of love and beauty. Graciously assisting men charm their desired spouse with love enchantments, Aphrodite herself was no stranger to divine lovers as she held various relationships with both gods and mortals. Yet, despite her dynamic desirability and mixed personality, Aphrodite had to overcome her weak and frightful self (http://www.greek-gods.info/greek-gods/aphrodite/) due to her jealousy. Even though it was thought that she was born the daughter of Zeus and Dione, it was more frequently believed that she was born of the foam in the sea off of island Cyprus. Later on, Aphrodite went to marry lame smith Hephaestus, Olympian god of Iron, but was quietly acquiring a private affair with Ares, god of War.
In one tale, hades the ruler of the underworld, fell in with Persephone and kidnapped her to make her his queen. Aphrodite is the goddess of Love, Beauty, and Fertility. Her transformative power is love, transforming the ordinary, the mundane into something beautiful, and special through love. Aphrodite’s symbols are: Eros, Dove, and Apple.
As soon as she saw Momus, the God of satire, Aphrodite knew that he was the one for her. Such an exquisite man, he did not seem to know what boundaries were, and found humor in even the darkest of situations. But, when he ridiculed Zeus and was banished from Mt. Olympus, Aphrodite immediately regretted her decision to bear his child. With great feelings of angst and resentment towards Momus, once the babe was born Aphrodite abandoned her in the home of an Amazon tribe. All the baby had was her father's mask and a name- Callidora. Callidora had an extremely difficult time growing up as an Amazonian warrior. Firstly, she was extremely clumsy. She could not hold a weapon and would constantly trip over her own feet. Also, she would consistently
Aphrodite is the goddess of love, beauty, pleasure and eternal youth. Ironically she is the wife of the ugliest gods Hephaestus and is the mother of the god of love, cupid. She is one of the twelve gods of Olympus. Aphrodite is notorious for her love affairs with gods and mortals. There are two stories of to the origin of Aphrodite. Some believe she is the daughter of Zeus and Dione. Others believe she was born when Cronus castrated Uranus in the seaworld.
The first Homeric Hymn of Aphrodite tells the story of Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love, desire, and beauty. She is the daughter of Zeus and highly regarded among both immortals and mortal men. The story recounts the power that Aphrodite possesses as well as the limitations of her power. One limitation this hymn primarily focuses on is a situation in which Aphrodite is humiliated. This myth utilizes strategies such as story structure and word choice in order to describe how Aphrodite is humiliated.
She was loving, alluring and most important she was drop dead gorgeous. She was even considered the most beautiful goddess in Olympia, her name is Aphrodite. Aphrodite represents various values but her most known are beauty, love, sexuality and fertility.
“What’s the secret wish of your crazy, wild heart? / Whom must Love compel with Her wily ruses / back into the glittering net of your arms? / Sappho, who hurts you?” (17-20). This is what Sappho wishes to hear from Aphrodite. The power and beauty
Aphrodite is growing quickly. She appears to thrive on the attention she gets from us: her mother and father. Strange words those, but also true in our case. It is odd to know that we are the parents of a child; one that we will watch grow up and become a leader of our new world. That is a great future to behold.
The only flaws that Aphrodite had was that she was extremely vain, had a bad temper, jealous, and unfaithful. She killed anyone who was more beautiful than she was. Her symbols are dolphins, roses, scallop shell, myrtle, turtle dove, sparrow, girdle, mirror, and swan. Weebly.com says that “Aphrodite placed the curse of snakes for hair and the stone-gaze upon Medusa and her sisters. Aphrodite was jealous of the three sisters beauty, and she grew so jealous, she cursed them.
Writes Stephen L. Harris and Gloria Platzner of California State University, “Aphrodite is variously redefined as a flirt who seduces men for the fun of it, as a mistress or lover, or as a whore. Consequently, she remains alluring, but her power is drastically diminished: in a world in which marriage is sanctified, she has no legitimate social place” (Harris & Platzner pg. 98). So it is such that despite an outward presence of incomparability, Aphrodite falls despite herself into the common role of the beautiful temptress. The nature of her myth is much in the same trend as the biblical figures of Jezebel, Delilah and perhaps even Eve. Her femininity is her flaw and her curse.
Aphrodite represents erotic love as a fascinating form of divine influence. The nude Aphrodite has powerful meaning and
In the beginning there was a very strong man. The strongest man alive at the time was Hercules. His symbol is a wooden club. Aphrodite is the hottest chick you will ever meet in your life. She makes the good guys go crazy.
Meanwhile, there was the mighty Zeus, the king of the gods, who was married to the goddess Hera. Hera is the goddess of War and Honesty, but she had an awful temper and often took it out on her husband, Zeus. Hera only loved Zeus because he was the king of gods and she wanted some of that power for herself, so she never let him leave her side, and although he was her husband, she talked badly about him, and constantly blamed and insulted him. Aphrodite witnessed this many times and started to feel empathy for Zeus, she knew Zeus was kind and didn’t deserve to be treated like that. At this, anger burned inside of Aphrodite for Hera and what she did to hurt Zeus, and as this anger burned she felt a passion. Aphrodite casually began to develop feelings for Zeus. She always told herself she shouldn’t, that Zeus was married and she needed to stay away, but she couldn’t help how she felt for Zeus.