Dehumanization Of Women In The Odyssey

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In the Iliad, by Homer, women are objectified and sexualized by men, but female goddesses are praised and worshipped by all morals, men and women.
Women being objectified is most prominent in the “stealing” of Helen from Menelaus. Paris takes her from Sparta and brings her to his land of Troy. In book 1, Agamemnon declares, “Let the Achaeans find me a prize in fair exchange to my liking, or I will come and take your own, or that of Ajax or of Ulysses; and he to whomsoever I may come shall rue my coming.” (9) She is constantly referred to as a “prize”, which is dehumanizing her. She is not considered a person, but an object that is glorification for men. Men, like Menelaus and Paris, fight over the most beautiful women, but do not care about …show more content…

In book 3, Aphrodite saves Paris from his death during his battle with Menelaus. Homer writes, “The tooled-leather chinstrap of Paris’ helmet was cutting into his neck’s tender skin, and Menelaus would have dragged him all the way back and won no end of glory. But Aphrodite, Zeus’ daughter, had all this in sharp focus and snapped the oxhide chinstrap…(Homer, 40)” She tactfully breaks the strap of Paris’ helmet, ultimately causing Menelaus to let go of his grip. She then saves him once again from Menelaus’ spear, which would have resulted in his death. In this instance, Aphrodite’s womanhood does not restrict her from being the hero of the story and saving a man who is considered one of the greatest among mortals.
Women, without divinity, are inferior to men and succumb to the less prominent roles of an accessory or prize. Being goddesses, they are heroes and in many cases active protagonists and superior to both men and women mortals. The status of being divine is the only characteristic that undos the sexism women face in the Iliad. The dehumanizing of women and the praising of goddess from moral men contradict each

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