Women And Treatment Of Women In Oedipus At Colonus

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It is typical to discuss women in the Oedipal trilogy mostly through the lense of Antigone. Admittedly, Antigone deals with women and their treatment more explicitly than the other books in the trilogy, and it is focused on an empowered female protagonist who does what she believes is right. However, when contrasted with Oedipus Rex and Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone features a very different depiction of women. In the first play, Antigone and Ismene never speak, and Jocasta, the only other female main character, speaks much less than the male characters. In Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone is present in nearly the entire play, but she is treated as a prop, functioning basically as Oedipus’s seeing-eye dog. The male characters continually dismiss …show more content…

Sophocles lived in Athens, and so his experience of women and his perception of their role in the world were formed by Athenian society. Athenian women may have lived in a different culture, but they were similar to many other Greek women in at least one respect: they were treated as entirely unequal. “In law Athenian women had no independent existence” (Blundell 114). Women were defined, controlled, and protected by their male guardians, who were their fathers, their husbands, or their eldest sons. They could not testify in court, but had to have their guardian testify for them. They were only allowed to trade in small sums, no more than the value of one measure of barley. It was theoretically possible for women to inherit property, but only if there was no male relative available. Most Athenian women were married young (from fourteen to eighteen) to men who were around thirty, which reinforced the unequal power dynamic between the spouses. Women were not educated in much more than the running of a home, and they were expected to raise a family and do little else. Women were not citizens in Athens, they could not vote, and they could not serve in political positions (Blundell 114-129). In short, in the society Sophocles lived in, women were treated as less than men, legally and …show more content…

Although Antigone is present throughout the play, characters do not turn to her unless they intend to use her. She, and Ismene in a lesser sense, is used as a means to an end all through the play: first she is a guide for Oedipus, then a pawn for Creon, then someone to bury Polynices. Everything she does in the play is because of a male character’s will. Oedipus continually treats Antigone as a means to an end. He refers to Antigone and Ismene as “props of my frame” (Sophocles 94). Even when Oedipus is not verbally objectifying his daughters, he treats them as things, only turning to them when he needs some kind of assistance. Creon uses Antigone and Ismene in his attempts to draw Oedipus back to Thebes, making them pawns and having his men capture them. Polynices, too, wants something from Antigone when he comes to see her. Instead of listening to her advice, he asks her to ensure that he receives a proper burial (Sophocles 59+). When Antigone and Ismene are saved from Creon’s men by Theseus, he is presented as “the deliverer of the girls… the agent of the action” (Markantonatos 111). Time and time again, Antigone and Ismene are portrayed as having no agency in their lives. They are at the mercy of the decisions of the men in the play, and do not appear to have any personal desires or wishes that are not related to male characters like Oedipus and

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