Xenophon on women

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In ancient Greece, women of wealthy families lived a life of segregation amongst the walls of their own homes. Due to the rapid expansion of Athens and more people moving from rural spaces to urban spaces; the duties of women moved from outdoor jobs, like agriculture, to indoor and less important jobs, like taking care of all the house duties (Pomeroy 1975, p71). Despite the fact that there were a number of roles that women played in the Athenian society, including prostitutes and priestesses, Xenophon believed that the most respectable work for an Athenian woman was to be a model wife. This main role was divided into three sub-roles that had to be done in order to be the perfect wife: take care of children, look after the shared property and to be responsible for her servants.

Xenophon believed that the main role of a woman is to become a good wife to her husband. In order to do this it was one of women’s main priorities to take care of new-born children. Women were meant to stay inside the household and have children, as Xenophon argued, their ‘’natural job [is] to feed new-born children’’ (The Estate Manager Ex. 7.6 – 7.19). To support this belief, Xenophon stated that is the ‘’ natural law which makes easier for a responsible woman to care her own children than to neglect them’’ (Xenophon, The Estate Manager Ex. 9.4 – 9.16). Furthermore, he strongly believed in the opposites, that male and female have different roles opposite to each other, but also ‘’this pairing with each other is established as a procreative unit’’ (Xenophon, The Estate Manager Ex. 7.6 – 7.19), so only through procreation these opposites can be together.
These arguments were strong in that time, given that women were not only pressured by society to have children, but also for the gods and nature. For instance, for the Athenians, the best contribution that a woman can give to society was

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