The Double Standard: Women Cast into the Shadow's of Men

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From the 12th century B.C. to today women have been pestered by the double standard. They have had to endure constant reminders that it is a man's world and they are just living in it. While women have tried to and continue to fight the double standard through various feminist movements overtime the problem still persists. The "war on women", as some like to call it, is nothing new and judging by how long the double standard has been around, it seems unlikely that the bar of equality between men and women will ever be perfectly just. The Odyssey shows how the double standard was no stranger even over 30 centuries ago. The epic poem focuses on alpha male, Odysseus’ journey home. Throughout the novel Odysseus continues to be described as strong, intelligent, and courageous despite his character flaws. He is portrayed as the man everyone wants to be. The Wife of Bath Tale in The Canterbury Tales is another story that clearly illustrates the extent of the double standard and how similar it is to today and 12th century B.C. Chaucer explains the importance of men in the lives of women. Women need men in order to go about their daily lives. The existence of the double standard makes it difficult for women to assert themselves. They have to find different ways to do so for example, Penelope deceitfully tricks her suitors by unweaving her loom. Through these examples it is clear that finding different ways proved to be unsuccessful. This idea is overlapped in The Odyssey and The Wife of Bath and depicts how the double standard has held women back forcing them to remain in man’s shadow.

Although women in The Odyssey have a major role in their society they are still very susceptible to the double standard. This epic narrative is about th...

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...g his voyage back to Ithica. In this, Penelope is expected to remain loyal to her husband while Odysseus could succumb to temptation without having his title as “hero” be at stake. The double standard shown in The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and The Wife of Bath’s Tale is more transparent because the bulk of the stories focuses on the existence of the double standard. The women shown throughout these stories are aware of the imbalance and wish to balance it. In the end the old hag in The Wife of Bath’s Tale equalizes this by being given authority over a man. The fact that The Odyssey and The Canterbury Tales were created in different era’s portrays how these ages as well as the current period differ in time but share a resemblance because society still faces the topic of inequality showing the importance of the matter and the difficulties women have had throughout time.

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