Treatment Of Women In The Odyssey

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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…

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…

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

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