How Does Aristophanes Use Irony In Lysistrata

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Lysistrata

In the midst of a war, the question of its purpose and legitimacy arise. In Aristophanes' Lysistrata, the protagonist, Lysistrata, revolts against the trivial Spartan and Athenian war that lasts for more than two decades and persuades other women to strike against the men by taking an oath of celibacy until the soldiers put down their arms. Aristophanes, using several scenes, advocates his desire for the bloodshed to cease by satirizing the folly of the war and making its supporters, the men, look foolish.
Aristophanes uses irony to convey his feelings about the war and get his audience to change. In the opening scene, Lysistra tells her plan to Calonice saying that Greece will "be saved by women." Ironically, Calonice, a

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