Gender And Queerness In The Bacchae

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Gender and queerness are currently hot-button topics in the West, especially now that many have begun to work towards deconstructing the preconceived notions we have about gender and presentation. In Ancient Greek myths and theatre, the general attitude towards what we’ll hereinafter refer to as queerness, since no such categories had yet been invented in Ancient Greece, was complicated; Plato himself went back and forth on his opinion on the matter. He first argued that “same-sex lovers were far more blessed than ordinary mortals” but in his final work, The Laws, asserts that homosexual relationships are “utterly unholy, odious-to-the-gods and ugliest of ugly things” (Guardian). In a patriarchal society where strapping young men traipsed about, exercising in next to nothing, these conflicting attitudes are unsurprising to a modern critic. It’s also worth noting that, while there are some mentions of women loving women in Ancient Greece, the prevailing version of what we call queer was between men, due to the Greeks’ phallocentric view of sex. …show more content…

Dionysus begins the play by telling us that he is a god disguised as human, already introducing us to the layers inherent in his identity. Pentheus himself refers to Dionysus as “this effeminate stranger,” (Euripides 449), confirming Dionysus’s status as gender-ambiguous. When comparing these two characters’ differing experiences in gender presentation, it is necessary to note that Dionysus’s presentation is natural for him; he is known for being this way and embraces it. Pentheus, however, must be goaded by Dionysus into dressing as a woman, stating that he would “be ashamed to” (Euripides 1015). He loses his authority in and surrounded by femininity, while Dionysus gains it, queering the gender binary and giving power to the Maenads they had previously never been afforded as

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