Gender Roles In Lysistrata

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Over the course of history, the societal roles of both men and women have changed with the times. The play Lysistrata, written by Aristophanes, gives the reader a glimpse of what life was like in Ancient Greece during the Peloponnesian war. The war was fought between Athens and Sparta with their respective allies, (however Aristophanes’s play provides humour about gender, sex and war). Throughout the play, women play a unique role in that they are presented as people who are involved with politics and were people who made decisions. Through the use of comedy this play demonstrates the absurdity of women acting like men and the play shows how dangerous situations can get when people change too abruptly. Internal conflict weakens both the city-state and the gender relationships. In the play Lysistrata, the citizens of Athens try to put an end to the Peloponnesian war. The men were unable to agree on any sort of peace treaty and were at a stalemate. The women in Athens had had enough of war and wanted harmony to exist between Athens and the neighbouring cities. The war continued for such a long time that the women decide to unite as a group and blindside the men with an ultimatum. The women turn against the men; which …show more content…

She asks for the full support of the other women and says that and once she has their support she announces that, “(w)e must renounce-sex” (line 123). Lysistrata demonstrates that women are intelligent and able to take a commanding stance. Lysistrata believes that an oath of chastity will ensure that the men listen. She predicts that if the men are deprived of sex they will become desperate and will finally agree to a peace treaty. This play demonstrates how women were abandoning their traditional roles as obedient wives who kept house for her

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