Treatment Of Women In The Odyssey

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Comparison between the treatment of women in Homer and Sophocles

Homer and Sophocles were important authors during the ancient Greek civilization, writing famous composed or poems like, Antigone, Odiepus the King, The Odyssey among others. Both authors have provided with their poem the fertilized for almost all the other arts and sciences in Western culture, irradiating our days with their works. Homer and Sophocles both illustrate women in similar ways in their composed, below the authority of men. Therefore, women were represented as slave, and were judged mainly by their looks rather than their accomplishments.

Homer and Sophocles, represented gender as was represented those days during the ancient Greek. Basically, women cannot compete with men, because they were stronger and more powerful. One famous phrase in Sophocles work, was when Ismene was arguing with Antigone “We are only women, not to be in nature to fight against men, and that we are ruled, by those who are stronger…” (163). In other words, women could not express their needs or their desires; they were born to serve, and to obey the decisions of the oppressor in this case the men. Another important fact that is represented on the Odyssey by Homer, it is when Penelope has no control over what the suitors do and …show more content…

Both authors illustrate that women did not play and important roll in the poems by their self; they just were mentioned if they have an important son or husband. Just were two cases, were women were mentioned for something that they did. One was in Antigone written by Sophocles, when Antigone defies Creon by burying Polynices. This shows the desire of this woman to be free and equal, and break this sexism. The second case was in The Odyssey, the only moment in this play where a woman was recognized by her acts, and it is not a positive fact. This was when Klymene betrayed her lord for

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