Tuesday, March 10, 2020
HumanitiesGrecoRoman Culture essays
HumanitiesGrecoRoman Culture essays    Aristophanes was a "craft" comedy poet in the fourth century B.C.      during the time of the Peloponnesian War.  Aristophanes' usual style was      to be too satirical, and suggesting the outlandish.  He shows little      mercy when mocking Socrates and his "new-fangled ideas" which were most      likely designed to destroy the cohesiveness of society and lead to              The most absurd and humorous of Aristophanes' comedies are those in      which the main characters, the heroes of the story, are women.  Smart              One of the most famous of Aristophanes' comedies depicting powerfully      effectual women is the Lysistrata, named after the female lead character      of the play.  It portrays Athenian Lysistrata and the women of Athens      teaming up with the women of Sparta to force their husbands to end the              To make the men agree to a peace treaty, the women seized the      Acropolis, where Athens' financial reserves are kept, and prevented the      men from squandering them further on the war. They then beat back an      attack on their position by the old men who have remained in Athens      while the younger men are out on campaign. When their husbands return      from battle, the women refuse to have sex with them. This sex strike,      which is portrayed in a series of (badly) exaggerated and blatant sexual      innuendoes, finally convinces the men of Athens and Sparta to agree to a              The Lysistrata shows women acting bravely and even aggressively against      men who seem resolved on ruining the city-state by prolonging a      pointless war and excessively expending reserves stored in the      Acropolis.  This in turn added to the destruction of their family life      by staying away from home for long stretches while on military      campaign.  The men would come home when they could, sexually relieve      themselves, and then leave again to continue a senseless war.              The women challenge the masculine role model to preserve...     
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.