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The Odyssey - Gender Roles. The Odyssey is the product of a society in which
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The Odyssey And The Epic Of Gilgamesh. ... In both epics these themes are illustrated.
In The Odyssey the theme of nostro is very prevalent in this epic. ...
The Odyssey And The Epic Of Gilgamesh. ... In both epics these themes are illustrated.
In The Odyssey the theme of nostro is very prevalent in this epic. ...
Telemakhos's personal odyssey. ... The Odyssey is reveals a series of great adventures
that crosses upon Odysseus? path as he returns home from the Trojan War. ...
Submitted by parisy on March 25, 2005
Category: English
Words: 1089 | Pages: 5
Views: 358
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The legend of The Odyssey tells the fortunate homecoming tale of the Trojan war hero, Odysseus. In the poem, there were similarities, yet many contradictions. There were many great women that had conflicting personalities and adverse motives, but also they were alike. There were many great men that hold successful fortune, but here were also ones that failed. With these oppositions they helped Odysseus to get back home to Ithaca, whether they wanted to or not. These women from the novel that have opposing qualities, yet help Odysseus get home and finish off the suitors, are Penelope and Clytemnestra, Circe and Calypso, and Eurycleia and Melantho.
This similarity of situation: Agamemnon = Odysseus; Orestes=Telemakhos.
Clytemnestra is a disloyal wife and a cruel woman, while Penelope is a devoted spouse and a wonderful lady. When King Agamemnon goes away to fight at Troy, his wife, Clytemnestra, has an affair. When he returns, she kills him, not even letting him see his son after ten long years. “…Poseidon did not drown me in the sea, no enemy struck me down on dry land; but Aigisthos plotted my death with my accursed wife…”(132). Meanwhile, when Odysseus goes to Troy, his wife Penelope is loyal for twenty years. Clytemnestra also kills all of Agamemnon’s friends and followers, while Penelope had rude suitors in her house and she never once harmed them for the three years that they ate her out of house and home. The one thing that the two women has in common was that they are both very witty and smart; Clytemnestra for planning the massacres and Penelope for the weaving of the shroud. “…I used to weave the web in the daytime, but in the night I unravelled it by torchlight. For three years I kept up the pretence, and they believed it…”(216). With their conflicting personalities the women did help Odysseus to return. When Agamemnon told Odysseus Clytemnestra’s tale in the Underworld, it makes him think about what his wife is doing and it...
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