Women's Role In The Odyssey

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In history, women have often played a more minor role in society and are subjected to the actions and authority imposed on them by men. They do not have as many rights and are not taken seriously just for their gender. In Homer’s Odyssey, intelligent and powerful women are considered inferior to men. They are underestimated and objectified and are expected to obey the orders of men. Examples of this include Circe, the Sirens, Penelope, Athena and servant women. This portrayal of women suggests that no matter their achievements and actions, men always think themselves superior to women, demonstrating the subordinate role of women in society. One example is that men in The Odyssey underestimate women, usually believing them to be harmless. This leads men into thinking that women are inferior to men, because they don’t consider them a threat. One example is when Odysseus’s crew started exploring Circe’s island. They are prepared to fight anyone they encounter, but when they see that it is a …show more content…

This is apparent when Odysseus’s men are turned into pigs and Odysseus confronts Circe. Odysseus tells Circe “‘Now it is I myself you hold, enticing me into your chamber, to your dangerous bed, to take my manhood when you have me stripped. I mount no bed of love with you upon it. Or swear me a great oath that if I do, you’ll work no more enchantment to my harm’” (IX, 382-387). Odysseus is saying that if he refuses to sleep with her on her terms, because that would strip him of his manhood and masculinity. He is also saying that he will only sleep with her on his terms. As a man, Odysseus believes that he should be the one in control of the situation. Letting a woman dominate him would be a sign of weakness, and suggests that Odysseus is not as powerful as a woman, which would most likely result in humiliation, given how women were viewed and treated in Ancient

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