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Penelope In Margaret Atwood's The Penelopiad

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I am a sucker for a good myth or a fairy tale re-telling; especially when those tales twist the perspective and help you see famous fictional events in a new way. In this case, the story is based off of The Odyssey but told from the perspective of Penelope. It doesn’t have the same grand sense of adventure and daringness; however, it is still a fascinating and extremely compelling story. Homer portrays Penelope as loyal, patient, and the ideal wife, as he contrasts her to Clytemnestra who killed Agamemnon upon his return from Troy. In The Penelopiad, Penelope feels obliged to tell her story because she is unsatisfied with Homer's portrayal of her and the other myths about her sleeping with the suitors. She rejects the role of the ideal wife and admits she was just trying to survive. For me, the most fascinating thing about The Penelopiad is that I never knew exactly how to …show more content…

Penelope is an important figure in our literary culture, but we have seldom heard her speak for herself. Her sometimes offensive comments in The Penelopiad about her cousin, Helen of Troy, for example make us think of Penelope differently. Helen was a very special figure in Atwood's version of the Odyssey. She is presented as beautiful, heartless, spiteful and vain. Her character provokes some hilarious and ironic comments by Penelope. Although Helen is described as very beautiful, she does not seem to be very smart in Atwood's version which is quite contrary to Penelope. Helen was very tall and extremely beautiful, Penelope was short and people emphasized her intelligence because she obviously wasn't as beautiful. Helen was the glamorous and ambitious one, and though Penelope seemed jealous of her beauty, it's Helen's ambition that really annoyed her. The much plainer Penelope more readily accepted her fate and resigned to playing her assigned role by doing what was

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