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Maslow's Higherarchy of Needs Character Analysis Essay

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In Stephen Stondheim’s musical, Sweeny Todd, Sweeny Todd says, “These are desperate times, Mrs. Lovett, and they call for desperate measures.” Todd and Lovett decide to make and market meat pies. The catch to their plan is the meat will be human. Sweeny Todd focuses on the decisions people make in desperate times. While normally no mentally stable individual would consider making pies out of human meat, the characters feel they will be unable to conquer their financial situation by any other means. Characters in other works may feel forced to make desperate decisions because they feel trapped by not only their economic situation, but by their relationships, family, and social situation. When analyzing a characters actions, one may decide …show more content…

Throughout The Odyssey, Odysseus is rarely focused on fulfilling this need because the Greeks value hospitality. As he is about to be sent away from Calypso’s island, Calypso says, “I will provide you with bread, water, red wine, as much as you like, you need not starve” (Homer 64). And later, the “two lay down in the corner of the lofty cave, and enjoyed their love together” (66). Together, these instances set a precedent for the rest of his journey. Odysseus is always offered food and shelter when he arrives at a Greek household. At one point, when he is weak and tired, “Athena shed sleep upon his eyes… that he might quickly rest from his weariness” (72). Greek hospitality, and a loose nymph, helps to fulfill Odysseus’ needs and enable him to focus on the other instinctoid needs. The second level of needs is the safety needs. Because the biological needs are met sufficiently, one can assume Odysseus’s actions will be governed by his need for “order, security, and predictability” (Hergenhahn 478). Throughout Odysseus’s journey, Poseidon causes Odysseus to be involved several shipwrecks. In one such instance “a great wave rolled up towering above him, and drove his vessel round. He lost hold of the steering-oar and fell out into the water” (Homer 68). Poseidon is able to harm Odysseus while he is in the water because he is the God of the sea. As long as Odysseus remains at sea, Poseidon continues to try to harm him

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