Role of Penelope in The Odyssey Essay

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    accordance with one’s cultural values often meant accepting societal mistreatment. Because most cultures have a system of mythology that includes women, in much of ancient literature, there is representation both of the actual role that women played, as well as the presence and role of mythical women in a specific culture. Through this juxtaposition , a discrepancy can be seen between how women were viewed in the abstract and how they were treated in reality. Mythological women are strong and…

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    kids”(Foerstner 2) In The Odyssey, by Homer, it tells the story of a man named Odysseus who is the Ithacan King. After fighting in the trojan war for 10 years, he gets lost and can’t seem to get back home after many many years of trying. Back at his home land, he has a wife named Penelope and son, Telemachus. Penelope is fighting struggles of her own as she fights off suitors who use her husband’s law of hospitality to come into their house, mistreat it, and try to win Penelope over so they may…

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    How The Odyssey Changed

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    The Odyssey was an epic of Odysseus written by Homer. It was an epic mythology that was published around 700 BC. The Odyssey was a very long poem cropped on a single subject. The movie emphasized the journey of Odysseus from Troy to Ithaca that took ten years, as long as how the Trojan War lasted. An extraordinary story of Odysseus was capsulated with his antagonists, including those mythical creatures he had met on his way home. Odysseus, being brave and strong was such a clever and faithful…

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    Homer’s story, The Odyssey, can be read and and interpreted two ways: as a feminist or sexist. The story has many prominent female characters that have a big influence in Odysseus’ journey home. The Goddesses Athena, Circe and Calypso, play a part in testing Odysseus while also supporting the feminist ideal. Penelope, Odysseus’ wife and a mortal, shows her feminist stance through her quiet determination and her defiance against the suitors. Even though the Greek view on women is extremely…

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    Throughout Homer’s Odyssey, Odysseus and his crew are tempted time and time again by lustrous women, food and drink, and riches. In many instances, the men give into their desires in hope of personal gain. They often do so without thinking, causing major problems for the rest of the shipmates. The voyage home is negatively affected after the crew gives in to the temptation of the Lotus-eaters, seductive women such as Circe and Calypso, the bag of Aeolus’ winds, and Helios’ Cattle. Although the…

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    Trust is needed to reach an end goal and gain a sense of tranquility and security from completing this end goal. In The Odyssey, trustworthiness leads to tranquility and security of people. Trust extends from thoughts to people in The Odyssey. Telemachus, Odysseus’ son, trusts in the idea that his father is still alive and gains tranquility and security when his trust is fulfilled when his father returns to Ithaca. Penelope’s trustworthy relationship with Odysseus manages to keep the suitors at…

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    submissive and obedient to men. The Odyssey is an epic poem that follows the adventures of Odysseus, the hero, while he sailed to his home in Ithaca. Along the way, he meets hostile beings and deities, and is tested again and again by the gods. After twenty years and after losing all of his men, he finally returns home to his son and wife. In Homer’s The Odyssey, women may be portrayed as powerful and complex, but upon closer inspection they fit into three narrow roles: a mother, as aides, or a…

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    Winn once said “No man succeeds without a good woman behind him”. This can be seen in both Homer’s The Odyssey, and the Coen brothers’ O Brother, Where Art Thou? through the characters of Penelope and Penny. In The Odyssey, Penelope is the leading cause for Odysseus’ desire to return home. She is the reason he fights and travels through such a peril journey in order to get home. Without Penelope, Odysseus would not have fought as hard as did for twenty years in order to return to his kingdom and…

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    Odysseus’ voyage teaches readers quite a bit about Greek values and beliefs. The Odyssey was said to have originated around three thousand years ago as an oral epic recited by the blind poet, Homer. Since then, the poem has been recited and built upon, and even deemed a poetic masterpiece. Archetypes make the world feel united; they create a sense of relation between different ethnicities, cultures, and generations. The Odyssey shows how Greek customs and values connect with those of modern…

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    but not having any power. This is what life is like for the women in The Odyssey. The Odyssey, which was written by Homer, tells a story about the hero Odysseus trying to return to his family after fighting in the Trojan war. This story takes place long long ago in a society that treats women very differently than they are treated today. Throughout the story the reader can see how the women are treated and what their role in the society is. Most importantly the reader can see how poorly the…

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