Shaping Identity Through Greek Mythology

908 Words2 Pages

In the Greek world, stories were told in the form of myths. These myths are what tell us the stories of their pasts, their lives, what they believed in, and more importantly what they saw within their society. So many things we know and are inspired by come from the Greek world but rarely do we look at the myths that shaped them into a society that they were. The myths we learned about from ancient Greeks world incorporated different deities, demigods, monsters, and heroes that were all praised and admired by the Greek people. These figures we imagined to lived on Mount Olympus but were something that was incorporated in the Greeks everyday lives. Some of the way this myths shaped the Greek world were through comparing and differentiating male vs. female, polis vs. polis, and Greek vs. "barbarian," to create this Greek identity. The most and probably well-known way to analyze how the myths created the Greek identity is not just looking at the Gods in the myths …show more content…

Zeus the ruler of Olympus and the king of the gods was the protector of justice, kingship, authority, and the social order. His personal life and marriage were rather a mess, though. Many myths talk about his love affairs with goddesses, Titans, and mortals with the problems that follow after. His wife Hera queen of the gods, was Zeus's sister and wife. And with all of his affairs and nothing she could do to him, she would be unkind and unforgiving toward Zeus's mistresses and their children. Poseidon, Zeus's brother god of the sea had been an own number of affairs outside of his marriage. Love affairs in Greek mythology rarely ended happily ever after. Many more affairs with various different gods and goddesses did occur which set the prescient in Greek culture as to what is acceptable for men and women to do as far as relationships, marriage, children, and the expectation in

Open Document