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The Odyssey : The Role Of Women In Homer's Odyssey

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For the Greeks, the epic of Homer was more than just a poem about gods, monsters, and people, but it was a story that showed different kinds of human interactions. The Odyssey portrays what is right or wrong in relationships between god and mortal, father and son, and man and woman. In the epic poem, the role of women is a vital demonstration of Ancient Greece. The women in the epic are unique in their personality, motives, and relationships towards men. In Homers, The Odyssey, all women are different, but all of them help to represent the role of the ideal woman.
Homers epic describes the world of women in Ancient Greece, a time where women were seen as inferior and fawning towards men; moreover, society was controlled by men and women …show more content…

Athena is a Goddess that is confident, practical, and smart. She is a master of disguise, which is very important in Odysseus' world. Athena embodies strength, bravery, and justice. She is a strong leader and a very clever decision maker. One can assume that she is the major reason that Odysseus was able to return home safely.
Another character that represents one of the varying roles of women in The Odyssey is Circe in her role as a seductress. When Odysseus and his men arrive on Circe's island, they are lured in by her seductively beautiful voice. Homer writes, “So they stood in the gateway of the fair-tressed goddess, and within they heard Circe singing with sweet voice, as she went to and fro before a great imperishable web, such as is the handiwork of goddesses, finely-woven and beautiful, and glorious.” (Book 10, Line 220) Odysseus' men respond to this by entering her house; the men's desire for Circe overpowers them, which allows the goddess to exploit their weaknesses. Although, Odysseus is very cunning and resourceful, there is more than one occasion in which he finds himself lost and confused after interacting with a woman.
Odysseus' relationship with his wife Penelope is another clear manifestation of gender roles within Homer's epic. Penelope is the most important female character in the epic; she is the wife of Odysseus and the mother of Telemachus. Since Odysseus has not returned from the war and is presumably dead, many

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