Odyssey Female Essay

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    The epic tales of The Odyssey and Inferno, respectively, were seemingly written along a parallel train of thought when describing their characters journey, easily engaging the creative functions of the reader with adventurous tales of hope and adventure. Their characters, Odysseus and Dante himself, reflect upon their like and equal struggles in the quest to return home and the help that they received along the way that helped them make the return possible. The Odyssey begins far ago when Odysseus

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    Throughout the Odyssey women play a substantial role in the epic poem; in the story women play both positive and negative roles, sometimes a little of both, some the women in the book also play a role of seductresses. Since the epic poem is mainly about Odysseus’s ten year journey home to Ithaca and his wife and the obstacles he encounters and has to overcome on the way many of those involving women, women that are positive in the Odyssey are Penelope, Athena, Nausicaa and Helen who help Odysseus

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    Homer’s Odyssey is an epic tale set in the world of ancient Greece - a world dominated by men. Admirable men such as Odysseus, the story’s protagonist, are strong, cunning, and wise; they have control over their lives and the people within them. In The Odyssey, the quintessential man is characterized by his authority, including control of the women who surround him. As is suggested throughout the novel, the patriarchal world would fall into disarray without the force of intrinsic male authority.

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    Homer wrote “The Odyssey” in 800 BC and it is one of the first epic poems to depict women with a bigger role and influence. In 1920 women are granted the right to vote and in 1972 it is declared “equal justice under law” to every citizen. For women to legally be given the same rights as men it takes 2,771 years. Today women are still not treated equal and it is 3,000 years ago when females are first shown to have importance in society. In most stories written during the early Greek ages women are

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    Although “The Odyssey” by the Greek poet Homer is very much an epic tale of a man’s heroic quest, women play an incredibly large role. Homer’s epic tale, “The Odyssey” revolves around Ulysses’ quest to return back to his wife, Penelope, so that he may be reunited with her and assume control over his palace, which has been overrun by suitors. Ulysses’ son, Telemachus attempts to regain authority in the presence of the many suitors but finds this difficult and embarks upon his own journey under the

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    The women form an important part of “The Odyssey”. There are three main types of women the goddess, the seductress, and the wife each females character adds a different element to the telling of the story. The most important woman is Penelope, wife of Odysseus. She is complex, she is very meek and she is very submissive and frail, later in the story she shows strength independence and cunning but mostly Penelope is the ideal Greek woman which is loyalty, submission and fertility. As she waits for

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    In the “Odyssey” and “Orpheus and Eurydice” there a few female characters that are key people in these mythological stories. Penelope, Circe, and Eurydice are each very different and play their own important role in their stories. In part 2 of the “Odyssey” there is a female character named Circe. Circe role in the book was to warn Odysseus about the Sirens. Circe is a goddess that pretends to be a nice, attractive, helpful person. But, she was dishonest, untrustworthy, smart person. When she first

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    In the poem The Odyssey, women play a major role, although it may not appear to be that way. The poem is centered around Odysseus adventures to return back to his wife Penelope. Without Penelope, there would be no story, which shows that the woman are a bigger part of this poem than people think. The women in The Odyssey are either seen as goddesses or they are treated as if they are a monster. Some even being turned into slaves. Nevertheless, all women in The Odyssey, whether they are seen as a

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    Written in the 8th Century BC, Homer‘s epic poem The Odyssey addresses the role of Greek gods and goddesses in the everyday life in ancient Greece. On the other hand, Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s historical document “The Declaration of Sentiments” written in 1848, provides insight into the societal inequality that was overwhelmingly prominent in the lives of men and women in 19th Century American culture. Homer’s The Odyssey and Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s “Declaration of Sentiments” both focus on the existence

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    Explain the influence of Homer’s Odyssey on Margaret Atwood. It is very clear that Atwood was influenced by The Odyssey when writing The Penelopiad. After reading The Odyssey, it left Atwood with more questions than answers about the maids and Penelope. Atwood waned to explore the poem from a female perspective. Atwood found many inconstancies in the story of the maids which she wanted to explore. She also wanted to explore Penelope’s role as a wife, mother and materfamilias. Margaret Atwood said

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