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Gender Roles In Oresteia By Aeschylus

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Throughout the "Oresteia," Aeschylus portrays gender as a social issue that results in increasing miasma within the House of Atreus. Aeschylus engages the cultural significance behind such sexist disputes by showing gender-based competition among Greeks who feel threatened when others do not maintain their expected masculine and feminine identities. However, he indicates that when women do act accordingly, they are still belittled from both men and other women. Through his portrayal of sexist double standards and society's rejection of diverse gender expression, Aeschylus exposes the widespread, unjust underestimation of females, who in the end, ironically possess authority. For an Athenian citizen, power and …show more content…

There is a clear emphasis on how women must act within the home, as a mother, and as a wife, but often when women do act as the stereotypical female, they are still discounted and viewed as irrational. And when females like Clytemnestra do not conform, and display their power, they are still undermined. For example, although Cassandra is both a slave and a mistress; she has abilities that contrast her inherent, low female status. When she prophesies, "Agamemnon. You will see him dead", the leader of the chorus dismisses her accurate forecast, sneering, "Peace, poor girl! Put those words to sleep,"the chorus refuses to be discerned by her accurate prediction, simply because only men can obtain such knowledge and she is just a girl. Additionally, based on Agamemnon's recent complaint about being honored like a women rather than revered properly as manly soldier, Aeschylus is further emphasizing how being associated with a women, especially a girl, is shameful. Therefore, Athenian women clearly cannot prevail since being female is an embarrassment and can't be overcome even with a-typical

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