Odyssey Female Essay

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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

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    Does Homer exhibit gender bias in the Odyssey?  Is the nature of woman as depicted in the Odyssey in any way revealing? Upon examining the text of the Odyssey for differential treatment on men and women, it becomes necessary to distinguish between three possible conclusions.  One, differences in treatment reflect the underlying Homeric thesis that  women are "different but equal in nature,"  Two, different treatment  of men and women in the text reflect a thesis that women are "different and unequal

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    Similes In Odyssey

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    Homer uses stylistic and narrative features to construct interesting and diverse female characters in his epic poem ‘The Odyssey’. Characters such as Penelope, Athene, Circe and Calypso are developed into varied and stimulating characters for Homer’s universal audience through the use of various literary techniques. Homer uses the stylistic feature of epic similes to depict Penelope as a diverse and interesting character. Homer offers this epic simile as a brief look into the inner thoughts and feelings

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    There are various important female roles in the Odyssey. Most of these roles involve women attempting to seduce Odysseus. One important female character encountered in the Odyssey is Calypso. She had seduced Odysseus into staying with her for 7 years. This had been beneficial for Odysseus, as it kept him out of trouble with the gods for quite a while. However, another important female character, Athena, had convinced the gods that it was time for Odysseus to go home. Though Calypso fell for Odysseus

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    Women play an influential role in The Odyssey. Women appear throughout the story, as goddesses, wives, princesses, or servants. The nymph Calypso enslaves Odysseus for many years. Odysseus desires to reach home and his wife Penelope. It is the goddess Athena who sets the action of The Odyssey rolling; she also guides and orchestrates everything to Odysseus’ good. Women in The Odyssey are divided into two classes: seductresses and helpmeets. By doing so, Homer demonstrates that women have the power

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    Role of Women in the Odyssey Essay

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    herself in the society of the present day, which is an exclusively masculine society, with laws framed by men and with a judicial system that judges feminine conduct from a masculine point of view” (Ibsen). This saying also applied to the times of the Odyssey, an epic constructed by the blind, eight century B.C.E. poet, Homer. As one of the few representatives of ancient Greek social order, the blind, Homer witnessed women as substandard to men, regardless of their actions; many of them existed as seductresses

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    home as told in the Odyssey by Homer is one consisting of various obstacles including the Lotus-eaters, Sirens, and man-eating Cyclopes. Women in the Homeric era were held to strict social conduct and only perceived to satisfy the physical needs of men as mothers and as lovers, which makes the large role they play in the Odyssey even more profound. The sexes were sharply separated: men and women had very few opportunities for mutual self-esteem and affection. However, the Odyssey features women who

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    Penelope serves as one of the most crucial characters within the Odyssey. She one of the few driving forces for our main protagonist’s journey home and she is also an exemplar model of female character breaking the mold of the damsel in distress. She actually takes it upon herself to take command, to some extent, of her own situation while her husband is presumably making his way back home from war. Penelope even matches Odysseus in craftiness and sly personality. For example, Penelope had told the

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    awhile we see those qualities and characteristics in another character. that 's the case with the characters of Demeter and Penelope. Although placed in different stories like The Odyssey and Homer’s Hymn to Demeter, both characters share qualities that makes them similar to one another. Furthermore, both powerful female characters experience an impactful loss that turns their life upside down. Demeter, a goddess of fertility, must struggle as she goes in the search for her daughter Persephone as

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    The Odyssey by Homer and the Old Testaments: King James Version are two of the most read and most sophisticated pieces of literature that have transcended through generations. While they share similar qualities; both greatly differ as well, especially when it comes to the women characters. Classical historian and professor of classical studies at Wellesley College, Mary Lefkowitz, makes a significant contrast between these two famous writings. She believes that a major difference between the women

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