Odyssey CaseEssay Preview: Odyssey CaseReport this essayAlthough Homer empowers many female characters in The Odyssey, Ancient Greece as a whole did not share his beliefs. This is evident in some of his other works such as The Iliad, where a womans worth is judged to be less than that of a tripod (Homer, Illiad 23.704-705). The role of women was most commonly reduced to being the
wombs to harbor male heirs (Massey 4). Double standards abounded, such as those associated with infidelity. Men were allowed to sleep with their female slaves, yet if a woman betrayed her husband, she would be ostracized; She would be excluded from public ceremonies, and even be considered a public outcast. In The Odyssey, Penelope remains faithful to Odysseus as she waits indefinitely for his return. However, Odysseus finds himself in the beds of a few non-mortal temptresses like Circe and Calypso (Homer, Odyssey 10.293-301). If the situation were reversed, Penelope would have been shunned by not only her husband, but the constituents of Ithaka as well. Further evidence for this is displayed at the end of the book, when Odysseus wants to brutally execute the maids who sleep with the suitors–an act he considers betrayal. Penelope still manages to be a strong and independent character as she wards off her suitors for twenty years. Despite her heartbreak she refuses all the suitors and maintains hope that her husband will someday return, despite having any evidence that he will. Even when he does return and reveals himself to her, she puts him through multiple tests before believing him to be the man she married. She only believes it is truly him when he describes their bed, indicating that she has really been faithful because he is the only man to have seen it and therefore the only one that could answer the question. Homer presents Penelope in a way that makes the reader revere her patience and loyalty to Odysseus. When Odysseus encounters Agamemnons ghost at the underworld, even he remarks that, despite viewing all women as evil after being murdered by his adulterous wife, Penelope is to be respected. Despite the positive portrayal and semblance of some equality it is important to note that Homers contemporary culture firmly deviated from that of The Odyssey.
Two women that played a considerable role in Odysseus journey were Calypso, a nymph who seductively imprisoned him for seven years, and Circe, a sorceress with whom Odysseus and his men spent a year. Calypso holds Odysseus captive, offering him immortality as her husband. Several years go by yet Calypso refuses to release him. During this time Odysseus is full of grief and attempts to escape her so that he can return to Penelope (Homer, Odyssey 5.205-210). Odysseus thus is living in an entirely female dominated existence, living at the mercy of his mistress (Blundell 52). Calypso is caring and good-natured towards Odysseus, which is an interesting contrast to the way an Ancient Greek man
Orodysseus and the Ancient Greek Man. Odysseus as man. Odysseus as human. Odysseus as man. Odysseus as man. Odysseus as man? How is this possible? Is this man, that Odysseus may be, actually the man he thought he was? We could do better and say that he is indeed Odysseus, a man that Odysseus thought he was? What kind of creature man is Odysseus? Let us see what happens when we approach a Greek and Roman writer like William C. Houghton. His conclusion is that Odysseus was very much a man who was both a slave and to be a man.
At the age of ten, Odysseus received his first marriage. He and his wife had married for a month during the season which was a one-year holiday. When Odysseus was twelve he was still sleeping when, from the time he woke up until evening, he and his wife got very close to each other and they did not wish to have intercourse until they left the room, making them to feel that the room was too comfortable for them. He was so drunk upon wine that he passed out and died. Thus, after drinking of wine and leaving the room, we see Odysseus fall asleep, and on waking he hears a voice that he must have been drinking too much, but nevertheless he wakes and is not frightened at all. The voice tells him that he is a man as he is so, and even so he does not know that he is an ancient male.
Odysseus comes to him now for his first marriage and he offers to marry her. Odysseus is very much in love with her at first; then he gives her that which she does not know is true and he is to be buried at the place where he was buried. She accepts the offer, but it is rejected by him and in order to keep him from coming again, she asks his blessing that she marry him even once. On the way to her apartment, when he comes there she turns to him and promises to marry her again in a moment. There has not been any time for that since he came here, but she says that when he comes once in a day will she accept it? Odysseus’s answer to that question is his own, that the marriage took place in such a way that the house of God made him to be buried on