Odyssey Female Essay

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    practice of misogyny into stone. There are some exceptional cases in the famous epic poems, the Epic of Gilgamesh of the Sumerians and Akkadians and the Odyssey from Homer of the Greeks. We all can agree that these epic poems or at most the authors did not view women with our modern perspective – equality among gender. However, we cannot deny that female characters helped set the path of the epic heroes’ journey to their goals. In these epic poems, women are portrayed as figures and themes of knowledge

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    Penelope of the Odyssey and Alcestis of Alcestis as Ideal Greek Females    Although there is some disagreement concerning the Greek’s definition of the ideal female, there is little disagreement that two women represented this Greek ideal. The character of Penelope of Homer's Odyssey 1 and Alcestis of Euripides' Alcestis 2, came to represent the same ideal of female excellence. The Greeks referred to this ideal female as a sophron woman. The qualities possessed by a sophron woman are tangible;

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    traveling through the dark, when they stumble on the cyclops’ island. Odysseus describes Polyphemus’ cave as “a giant’s lair” hidden by enormous trees “looming darkly” (Homer, Odyssey, p. 217, 9.207). These descriptions set the scene so that the reader is preparing for the worst, whoever this “grim loner” is (Homer, Odyssey, p. 217,

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    The Faithfull Wife: An Analysis of the Odyssey and Agamemnon based on Theano’s Letter of Marriage and Fidelity The idea of marriage and family go hand in hand for most. The preconceived notion is that if someone has chosen a partner or spouse that they should be devoted and faithful to that spouse. Often times both partners are capable of remaining faithful in the relationship and are able to maintain the strength of their union. However, on occasion one or both partners commit adultery. Consequently

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    The Odyssey begins by describing Odysseus, a “man of twists and turns” (Homer 1996: 1) showing that this book is focused on the men, rather than the women. Shortly after, the first description of any womanly figure is “bewitching” (Homer 1996: 2), which shows that as the epic progresses, the description of most female adversaries would be negative. In Hippolytus, Aphrodite begins by saying that she “treats well who revere her power” but “trips up those who are proud (averse) to her” (Euripides 2001:

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    Role of Women in Iliad, Odyssey, and the Bible Much is known of men in ancient civilizations, from the famous philosophers and mathematicians of Greece to the patriarchs and subsequent kings of the nation of Israel. It would seem, however, that history has forgotten the women of these times. What of the famous female thinkers of Ancient Greece, the distinguished stateswomen of Rome? What power did they hold? What was their position in societies of the distant past? A glimpse into the roles and

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    the steps of Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey. During the rest of the story, the steps change order and some are taken out completely. One could argue a valid statement for each of the steps, but some are more figurative rather than literal. The Odyssey the Epic Hero Cycle Odysseus is the King of Ithaca. He has been fighting in the Trojan War and helped the Greeks win the Trojan War. After winning the Trojan War he wants to get home and reclaim his kingdom and to see his wife and his son, Telemachus

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    Imagine living at a time in which women were only seen as second-class or lesser beings. The Odyssey, by Homer, is an epic poem based on the story of an ancient Greek hero known as Odysseus. The Story follows his twenty-year journey, ten spent fighting the war, and the other ten spent getting home. Throughout the Poem, Homer presents the roles and nature of women. In The Odyssey, Greek society is controlled by men, while women face an entrenched societal expectation to be subservient and loyal without

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    their gender. Over 3,000 years ago, though, the views on females were quite the opposite. In Homer’s epic poem, The Odyssey, he explores this long standing relationship between males and females and questions how much admiration the latter should receive. Greek society gave women fairly traditional roles of a wife or mother, however, in The Odyssey, they have the positions of companion, mentor or temptress to Odysseus. Homer allows his female characters to control Odysseus’ journey from their conventional

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    1. The Russian-American sociologist Pitirim Sorokin categories three cyclical waxing and waning value systems of Western history, the sensate, which focuses matter alone as the ultimate reality and our sensory perception as the means to truth, the ideational, which holds that true reality is beyond the material world in the spiritual/metaphysical realm, and the idealistic, which attains the highest and noblest expression of both sensate and ideational values systems. Using the primary texts and

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