Odyssey Female Essay

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    fully armed and ready for battle. However, beside all this pomp, she is a rather caring, if war-loving, immortal. Throughout the entirety of The Odyssey she conveys an entirely platonic, almost motherly love for Odysseus. It is this that makes her significant character in Homer’s work. In The Odyssey, Athena is portrayed as a, if not the, major female figure throughout the entire epic poem. With her affection for Odysseus and her frequent appearances she plays a major role throughout the entire

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    The society of the ancient Greeks in The Odyssey, by Homer, is different than the one that we know today. The currency, transportation, and technology were all different. Another part of society that was also different was gender roles. For instance, women were bound to the home and men were able to do pretty much anything they pleased. Double standards arose—a man could travel by himself and be praised for getting to see the world, while a woman who did the same was berated and reckoned by others

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    Although The Odyssey is a poem about Odysseus’ trek home after The Trojan War, gender roles are an important part of the story and female archetypes that are still used today. The five main female characters who fit into these archetypes are Penelope, Athena, Calypso, Scylla, and Charybdis. Each of these women fit into the archetypes of the maiden, the temptress, the monster or villian, and the nurturer. Greek philosopher Aristotle believed that “the male is by nature superior and the female inferior

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    Odysseus’s Feminine Cunning The idea of gender fluidity is not necessarily an incorrect statement as both Odysseus and Athena take on both female and male disguises and possess both “male” and “female” qualities. Similarly, in one Greek comedy “Thesmophoriazusae,” men dress up as women to infiltrate a conference as they believe these “mad” women are planning to kill one of the Greek playwrights Euripides. However, in the festival the men discover women acting as noble citizens of Greece and make

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    Margaret Atwood’s The Penelopiad directly challenges and explores the issues, conflicts and expectations faces by women living in a patriarchal society. In her subversion of Homer’s mythic, The Odyssey, Atwood’s polyphonic novella introduces a range of new perspectives; Penelope and her maids, preciously ignored and disregarded in the original myth. These new perspectives raise issues about the validity of narrators, and the ways in which myths are distorted within the context of their original writers

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    Kirkus ENG 2423 8A March 21, 2013 Roles of Women in The Iliad and The Odyssey Homer wrote two epic poems, The Iliad and The Odyssey. The Iliad is a tragedy that tells about the battles of the Trojan War. The Odyssey is somewhat of a sequel, the story of Odysseus 's travels home after the Trojan War. An article found in “The American Scholar” states, “ One might begin by asking what both epics, The Iliad and The Odyssey, would be like if there were no women in them. The Trojan war would not

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    Dennis Honors English 4th Period November 2, 2014 Women in the Odyssey The power of women in society has not been apparent until the past one hundred years or so. Until females developed a stronger role in society, they controlled others and held power in more subtle ways. Humans were unknowingly persuaded to do what women expected them to do. The distinct traits of women provided them with the talent of influence among men. In The Odyssey, women exert their power by using their intelligence, dominance

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    Poseidon In The Odyssey

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    Greek culture and society, aspects of ancient Greece are shown in The Odyssey. The Odyssey is a work of fiction written by Homer, the epic poem focuses on the great hero Odysseus’s voyage back home to his land of Ithaca. Odysseus goes through many obstacles trying to get home after the Trojan war, he fights monsters, goes to foreign lands, and gets treasure and gold on his way home. Though it is a work of fiction, The Odyssey story and characters are affected by ancient Greek culture and life, this

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    The Odyssey And The Iliad

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    Homer was one of the first great authors in Western culture. He was known for creating the two Greek epics The Odyssey and The Iliad, which. The Odyssey tells of the ten-year journey by Odysseus to Ithica from Troy to be reunited with his beloved wife. The Odyssey was written in a with illustrative language. The Iliad was written in a. It depicted the end of the Trojan War and the siege of Troy. This event occurred centuries before Homer was assumed to have been born. Although both epics were written

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    In the book of Odyssey written by Homer, the character archetype that Calypso represents is a clingy but loyal love interest. Calypso provides food and drink for Odysseus because she wants him to be with her. She told him that he could be immortal if he stayed with her, but Odysseus refused. Calypso finally lets go of Odysseus by the command of Hermes, and helps him by giving him a boat. This adds to the plot because some female characters are deceiving, like Circe and the

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