preview

Lysistrata Essay

Satisfactory Essays

When one first hears the plot of Aristophanes’s Lysistrata it’s impossible not to laugh. A sex-strife brought on by the seemingly endless Peloponnesian War with Athenian women deviously wagering sex for peace; Women seizing the Acropolis as Greece’s new financial advisors, and men rendered helpless because of an inability to sleep with the women they desire. At first, the plot sounds amusingly ludicrous. The competence of the play’s eponymous protagonist, who hatches the plan and persuades the other women to participate, also seems like Aristophanes’s attempt to create a strong female character – something severely lacking from Greek literature thus far. However, the reality of Lysistrata is not so innocent. For one, the play was meant for a Classical Greek audience which would have been comprised of mostly males. What’re more, the audience would have understood the play to be portraying a hilarious scenario, not a plea to equalize the sexes through its positive depictions of women. The idea that a woman would want to work outside of the domestic sphere seems to have been inherently funny to the citizens of Athens. Yet, and in an off-handed sense, Lysistrata has been considered a “feminist” text because of its focus on female agency. Before I proceed, it’s important to define feminism holds a common goal of establishing economic, political, and social equality of the sexes and the disenfranchised. Feminist texts, then, are works that support the goals and intentions of this

Get Access