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Lysistrata Love War

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Make Love, Not War As a William Golding once said “I think women are foolish to pretend they are equal to men, they are far superior and always have been”, this is a good quote to relate to how the women have higher power, self-control and a strive for greater good in this particular play. The women in the play Lysistrata use sex as a major tool in controlling the men from going to war and generally for the greater good of the people. The play’s key leitmotif is based around the protagonist Lysistrata gathering the women of Greece, Sparta, Thebes and various other regions of conflict to persuade them to withhold/refuse sex from their husbands or men in general until they come to terms of peace and end the war that has been causing the turbulence between the …show more content…

Even though women were seen as without any use other than to fulfil every need of the men in their lives back then, they largely held control of men because of their perpetual thirst for sex, this thirst has yet to be quenched even in current times. The use of this manipulation may not be for the reason to avoid men from going to war but is still used in various fields. For example, in the field of adultery, the industry is estimated at about $97 billion which is a largely profitable business, which is again fueled by the thirst of men for sex and how women are able to profit from choosing to supply/withhold it from men, which shows how sex can basically be used as a tool for manipulation and control. In correlation to the play of Lysistrata, the women in the play used sex similarly for manipulation of men, although in the play this power is used for good and for the benefit of the people whereas sex and its power of manipulation and control are seen much more destructive in today’s time due to the deeds of crime that take place in relation to the

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