In The Odyssey Odysseus is portrayed as a god-like mortal put through harsh trials that greatly delay his trek back to Ithaca. Many of the temptations throughout The Odyssey are uncannily similar in that they are represented as female characters. It is imperative to analyze how his interactions with Calypso, Sirens, Circe, and Naussica affected Odysseus’s behavior and impaired his judgment during his journey home. Homer depicts many of the temptations of Odysseus as female to induce the reader that women, both goddesses and mortals, possess a seductive quality that cause men to err and become irrational thinkers. I believe Homer was bringing forth his idle supposition that men need to be cautious because women are mischievous. Thus begins our …show more content…
examination of how and why these temptations of females can bring forth trouble to even the most powerful of men, such as Odysseus. Odysseus’s epic homecoming seems improbable as a captive on Calypso’s island, Ogygia. Calypso grew very fond of Odysseus a short time after his being stranded on the island. Calypso tries to seduce Odysseus to stay with her by offering immortality and eternal youth; however, Odysseus, being the honorable man he is, refuses her offer and continues his days thinking about his wife, son, and Ithaca. Even after Calypso informs Odysseus that he is free to go, she continues to entice him to give up his journey home and stay with her: “But if you had any idea of all the pain\You’re destined to suffer before getting home\ You’d stay with me, deathless—“ (Odyssey 5. 205-208). Homer uses Calypso to distract Odysseus from his journey. Not only does Calypso make generous offers to hero Odysseus, she provides a temptation that no man can resist, sex. Homer portrays Odysseus as the epitome of Greek heroes, but even he, who supposedly loves his wife, cannot refuse the temptation of sex with Calypso. This is Homer’s way of saying that women would use what they have to get what they want. This seductive trait reflects one of the many sly abilities that women have on men. It is foreshadowed by Calypso that his journey will be perilous after leaving Ogygia.
Homer uses these upcoming trials as opportunities to slander the reputation of women further by showing how their actions cause distress to men. The fact that Homer portrays Circe as a witch/goddess is ironic because the term witch has evil connotations. Circe is not only a woman whom is mischievous, she has the ability to transform and manipulate men. Homer used Circe as an example to show that scheming women have a misleading façade. “She heard me call and came out at once\Opening the bright doors and inviting me in” (Odyssey 10. 332-333). This scene acts as a warning to all men to be cautious around women because they may be deceived. Homer exemplifies the powers of women by stating that even a god must intervene to save Odysseus. After Odysseus outwits Circe, she is still able to seduce him into staying on her island for almost one year as her lover. She baths him, gives him food, and that unspoken stipulation of sex once again finds its place in the …show more content…
story. While the Sirens have a short part in The Odyssey, Homer warns of the beauty and eloquent voices that can ensnare men. Once a woman ensnares a man, ruin is inevitable: ”Anyone who approaches\Unaware and hears their voice will never again\ be welcomed home by wife and children” (Odyssey 12. 42-44). Homer, however, provides a method to combat such women. The use of kneading sweet wax is to block the provocative words of women. Homer may have been encouraging men to ignore the words/opinions of women because listening to them will cause adverse situations. Just listening to the voice of a siren is enough to make Odysseus irrational. The rope used to tie Odysseus to the mast may be a metaphor in that women try to unravel the bonds that a man has worked so hard in tying. Women are beautiful, seductive creatures that even married men find almost irresistible. Naussica takes on a different role as a temptress because she offers something different than Calypso and Circe: She offers an innocent and honorable marriage.
Odysseus has the option of starting fresh and making a family with the beautiful Naussica. After all of his hardships on his journey home, Naussica must have looked extremely enticing for Odysseus. Alcinous is even for the marriage: “—being the kind of man you are—\my kind of man—would marry my daughter\And stay here and be called my son” (Odyssey 7. 333-335). Unfortunately for Naussica, Odysseus has no intention of wasting more time: he has finally set his sights on Ithaca. It is rather humorous to see how Odysseus turns her down, but when Calypso and Circe confronted him with sex, he is caved in. Perhaps Homer was attempting to shed some negative light on men and their
morals? Throughout the Odyssey, the appearance of seductresses is a reoccurring motif. These women share the common trait of distracting Odysseus from his homecoming. Homer was portraying that not all women are virtuous and admirable. The temptations took the form of women to signify that men are susceptible to their beauty and easily coaxed. If these temptations took the form of men, Odysseus would have, most likely, slain them before he allowed them to explain their actions.
The Odyssey: Portrayal of Women How does Homer portray women in the epic, The Odyssey? In order to answer this question you must look at woman and goddesses as two separate groups of people who are "people". This is because they are portrayed in two separate ways. You see, a regular woman like Penelope is looked at as beautiful but has.
Greeks had a misogynistic society, however women still had important roles in the Odyssey. Mortal women's most esteemed roles were either wife or mother. All the mortal female characters in the Odyssey existed to interact with a male, due to their beauty or sex appeal. But, the most powerful female characters in the Odyssey have other qualities such as cleverness which still play a role. Beauty is still one of the most important thing to Homer. For instance he starts a war using Helen of Troys beauty, and makes the two of the biggest obstacles Odysseus has to deal with love interests, Circe and Calypso. If you’ll remember he stayed on Circe's island an extra year longer of his own free will. However, Circe and Calypso are not mortal, so they already have the advantage. Homers non mortal women all have other qualities to them that allow them to help the plot along. Namely, Penelope, Queen of Ithaca and Odysseus bride.
Judged by modern Western standards, the treatment of women by men in Homer's Odyssey can be characterized as sexist. Women in Homer's Odyssey are judged mainly by their looks. If important men and gods consider a woman beautiful, or if her son or husband is a hero or has an important position such as king, the woman is successful. The way women in The Odyssey are treated is based on appearance, the things men want from them, and whether the woman has any power over men. During Odysseus' journey to the underworld he sees many different types of women. We hear about their beauty, their important sons, or their affairs with gods. We hear nothing about these women's accomplishments in their lifetime. Odysseus tells how Antiope could "boast a god for a lover,"(193) as could Tyro and many other women. Epikaste was called "that prize"(195) her own son unwittingly married.
Again Odysseus shows a lack of self discipline while with the witch Circe. Odysseus chooses to stay with Circe instead of trying to make it back to his wife, Penelope, and his kingdom of Ithaca. In the Odyssey it says "he enjoyed the many pleasures of Circe." (Page 913). This proves that Odysseus, once again has no control over himself when he is tempted. He choose the beautiful witch over his very own wife who has been waiting for years for him to return.
Odysseus ' principles and characteristics are a prototype of an ideal Homeric Greek leader. Odysseus is noble, clever and loyal. Through his distress and blunders, he gains knowledge that was not only crucial for his survival but for his companions too. Odysseus’s cleverness constantly allowed him to avoid death because he relied on trickery, rhetoric and disguise. “The society depicted in The Odyssey is one where male values were dominant and where all socially relevant transactions took place between the male members of the community”. (Whittaker 39) While males’ dominance takes the forefront in society, their principles are continuously being challenged by the allurement of women. In The Odyssey, many instances of such seduction reveals
Homer's great epic, "The Odyssey" was written several thousands of years ago, a time in human history when men played the dominant role in society. The entire structure of civilization was organized and controlled by men; It was an accepted fact that women held an inferior position in society. Society was constructed as if women were around only to serve the men. The involvement of women in any circumstance was almost completely dominated by what the men allowed. The women were valued in society, only they were not given important roles or any decision making power. It is as if they held no power in the ancient Greek society. This is why Homer's Odyssey is very unique, Homer put women into roles that were previously unheard of for women to possess. Unlike in The Iliad, where women served merely as an object to men; female characters of Odyssey are distinctive because they possess personality, and have intricate relationships with the male characters of the Odyssey. By characterizing the women in "The Odyssey", a reader may come to some conclusions about the role of women in this epic. Along with the belief that women played a secondary role to men in society, the female characters displayed certain traits that could not be exhibited by the men. Athena demonstrated the most intelligence and valor out of all the characters in "The Odyssey." The male characters play the most significant roles in this epic, but without the support of the females in "The Odyssey", Odysseus would not have made it through his journey.
Yet, despite the fact that no two women in this epic are alike, each—through her vices or virtues—helps to delineate the role of the ideal woman. Below, we will show the importance of Circe, Calypso, Nausicaa, Clytaemestra, and Penelope in terms of the movement of the narrative and in defining social roles for the Ancient Greeks. Before we delve into the traits of individual characters, it is important to understand certain assumptions about women that prevailed in the Homeric Age. By modern standards, the Ancient Greeks would be considered a rabidly misogynistic culture. Indeed, the notoriously sour Boetian playwright Hesiod-- who wrote about fifty years before Homer-- proclaimed "Zeus who thunders on high made women to be evil to mortal men, with a nature to do evil (Theogony 600).
The women in The Odyssey are a fair representation of women in ancient Greek culture. In his work, Homer brings forth women of different prestige. First there are the goddesses, then Penelope, and lastly the servant girls. Each of the three factions forms an important part of The Odyssey and helps us look into what women were like in ancient Greece.
An epic hero is almost overwhelmed with difficulty, often beyond that which a normal man could withstand. Not only is he confronted occasionally by danger or hopelessness; it is the entire premise of the poem. “Sing to me of the man, Muse, the man of twists and turns driven time and again off course, once he had plundered the hallowed heights of Troy” (Fagles 77). This it the first line of the whole poem, summing up what is going to happen as the speaker prays to the Muses, goddesses of stories. There is in fact, no other person, fictional or otherwise, in all of history, ever so besieged with difficulty, as Odysseus. Women and goddesses often tempt epic heroes, and Odysseus is tempted too. The goddess Circe is one of the many people who tempt him, “Come, sheath your sword, lets go to bed together, mount my bed and mix in the magic work of love-we’ll breed deep trust between us” (Fagles 240). Though Odysseus does bed with her, he never loses sight of his hope of coming home to his wife, Penelope.
The women presented throughout The Odyssey provide a respectable representation of women in ancient Greece in general. There are several women introduced in The Odyssey, all of various backgrounds and social classes. The most notable women or type of women in this epic include goddesses, Penelope, and the housemaids and servants.
Odysseus on numerous occasions, is unfaithful to Penelope. Penelope however, remains loyal to Odysseus and she is praised by greek society for it while Odysseus is never seen as adulterous for his disloyalty. However, one could argue that Odysseus’s relationship with Calypso is non-consensual, as she used her power over him as a goddess to control him and keep him on the island. In the end, however, Penelope and Telemachus are the main reasons Odysseus continues his journey home to Ithaca. The other marriage we are introduced to is the relationship between Agamemnon and his wife Clytemnestra. When Agamemnon returned from war, his wife and her lover murdered him. He sees this as a cruel act of deceit, despite the fact that he killed their daughter. Agamemnon views Clytemnestra, and other women as evil and untrustworthy. In book eleven he tells Odysseus, “So, there’s nothing more deadly, bestial than a women set on works like these, what a monstrous thing she plotted, slaughtered her own lawful husband!” Agamemnon makes this generalization and doesn’t take into consideration that he also cheated on his wife and probably murdered numerous
...ow Greek civilization was founded by women; they were the ones who gave birth to the heroes. Similarly, The Odyssey is a story created by women. The plot revolves around the actions of women. Athena orchestrates all the events. The seductresses, such as Circe, the sirens, and Calypso, attempt to stop Odysseus from reaching home. The helpmeets, such as Nausicaa, Arete, and Athena, aid Odysseus in his homecoming. The wise and virtuous Penelope is the object of Odysseus’ quest. Unlike Helen who forsakes her husband, Penelope remains faithful. Unlike Clytemnestra who assassinates her husband, Penelope patiently waits for Odysseus. She becomes a model of female patience and of female intelligence. Her craftiness is the only one which can match up to Odysseus’. The Odyssey presents a wide array of women and demonstrates the influence that women have in the life of a hero.
“A woman cannot be 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, prostitutes, or slaves. He engraved into his poem women’s roles; the roles of women, as mothers, wives, seductresses, and goddesses are exemplified in this epic, when shown in comparison to the men of that era.
In the era of Homer, women played a very specific role in society, and even in literature. Women of this time were basically put in a box, and expected to never step out of line. If they did go against the arbitration of men, then they were faced with serious consequences. However, female characters play a huge role in both aiding, and delaying Odysseus’s journey home. I will proceed to analyze, and interpret the actions and intentions of every major female character in The Odyssey.
In Homer’s The Odyssey, there are many types of characters. Some good and some bad. There are many questions that are raised throughout the story such as: How will Odysseus get home, will he get home in time to help Penelope, will Telemachus find his father, and one other that is very important, can women be trusted? This question is initially brought about with Odysseus’ run in with Agamemnon in Hades and it lingers throughout the story. There are multiple women in The Odyssey and they all have different characteristics, but for the most part, they all show that women cannot be trusted. When put to the test, they show their true colors and reveal that they are only worried about their own interests. In the end, it comes back to bite some of