Studyspark Study Document

Roles of Women Figures in Thesis

Pages:6 (1940 words)

Subject:Social Issues

Topic:Role Of Women

Document Type:Thesis

Document:#51848216


Either as mothers, sisters, wives, daughters, mistresses, lovers or supernatural creatures, women populate the world of the Odyssey and bring thus an important source of information when it comes to finding parallels between their representations in real life as drawn from the representations they get in the Homeric epic.

Based on the same starting point as the Odyssey, another ancient author, the Roman Virgil wrote the epic Aeneid. He lived in the most flourishing times of the Roman empire, in the first century BC, almost seven centuries after the Odyssey and the Iliad had probably been written. The heroes in Virgil's epic are still men, but the women gain a new role: that of sounders and rulers. Analyzing the whole range of epics and poems written by ancient Greek and Latin writers, A.M. Keith points out that "classical Greek and Latin epic poetry was composed by men, consumed largely by men, and centrally concerned with men" (Keith, 1). Both the Greek and the Roman societies in ancient and classical times were patriarchal societies that reserved women restricted roles in their relationships with their fellow men and in the larger context of the social life of the community. They were mostly confined to the quarters of their household and the companionship of their children and other women, therefore roles like that Dido plays in Virgil's Aeneid are highly unusual for human female characters. They are rather exceptions than setting a rule for future generations since women only gained equal rights in the twentieth century AD and they are still fighting for them in different parts of the world.

Church, Alfred J., and Homer. The Iliad of Homer. New York: Biblo and Tannen, 1951.

The Epic of Gilgamesh. Trans. Maureen Gallery Kovacs. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1989.

Graham, A.J. "1 The Odyssey, History, and Women." The Distaff Side: Representing the Female in Homer's Odyssey. Ed. Beth Cohen. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.

Buitron, Diana. Cohen, Oliver Beth. Between Skylla and Penelope: Female Characters of the Odyssey in Archaic and Classical Greek Art. Ed. Beth Cohen. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995

Homer. Odyssey. Trans. Stanley Lombardo. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing, 2000.

Virgil. Aeneid. Trans. Stanley Lombardo. Indianapolis: Hackett, 2005.

Avery, Dorothy. Women in the Iliad. Copyright: D. Avery 2004. Retrieved: May 7, 2009. Available at: http://www.latrobe.edu.au/arts/tradition/tradavery1.html

Keith, A.M. Engendering Rome: Women in Latin…


Sample Source(s) Used

Virgil. Aeneid. Trans. Stanley Lombardo. Indianapolis: Hackett, 2005.

Avery, Dorothy. Women in the Iliad. Copyright: D. Avery 2004. Retrieved: May 7, 2009. Available at: http://www.latrobe.edu.au/arts/tradition/tradavery1.html

Keith, A.M. Engendering Rome: Women in Latin Epic. Cambridge University Press, 2000.

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Women's Role Women Have Always

Pages: 7 (3027 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Sports - Women Document: #4261841

Islamic women are now restricted from most activities, and their rights have been steadily decreasing. Her social and political as well as economic rights are all being violated everyday by unscrupulous men who have corrupted the very religion to their own advantage, and today, especially in most Arab countries, woman has become 'Awarah', or the very subject of concealment, wherein her public presence is banned; where even her very

Studyspark Study Document

Women Camp Followers of the

Pages: 12 (3898 words) Sources: 12 Subject: Sports - Women Document: #97555122

The role of women in the camp followers group was therefore crucial for the armies, regardless of their affiliation. At the same time though, there were a lot of criticism brought to the group of "camp followers." One example in this sense was the reluctance to the idea of women in the camp followers group. More precisely, "many equated 'camp follower' with 'whore' or even if they were not quite

Studyspark Study Document

Women in the American Revolution Social Status

Pages: 20 (8769 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Drama - World Document: #5396822

Women in the American Revolution Social Status of Women in the Revolution Molly Pitcher - the real story Evidence supporting her existence Evidence denying her existence An American Icon Other Women who took up Arms Women as Spies Ann Bates Miss Jenny Life as a Camp Follower Women in Supporting Roles The winds of Equality Abigail Adams Patriotism Men's views on Women in the Revolution Women as a Symbol of the Comforts of Home Women in the American Revolution played a deciding factor in the success of

Studyspark Study Document

Role of the Woman in Ancient Rome

Pages: 3 (1014 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Drama - World Document: #95705877

Women in Ancient Rome What was the role -- or roles -- of women in ancient Rome? There are a number of sources in the literature that point to a wide variety of interesting and sometimes humiliating roles and positions that women were linked to in Ancient Rome, and this paper reviews several of those. Women in Ancient Rome -- The Literature has researched and reported on a number of interesting instances of

Studyspark Study Document

Women's Choice Lead a Celebate Life, Remain

Pages: 12 (3758 words) Sources: 14 Subject: Sports - Women Document: #83281442

Women's choice lead a celebate life, remain a virgin, a rejection societal expectations? A conclusion drawn thesis question. I attaching suggested books citation. Essay 12 pages length counting citations bibliography. Was a Women's choice to lead a celibate life or remain a virgin a rejection of societal expectations? The role of women in the society has been widely debated throughout the history of both philosophical thought and social sciences. Women have

Studyspark Study Document

Women in Society

Pages: 2 (604 words) Subject: Sports - Women Document: #21360066

Room of One's Own," the author discussed how men continuously perpetuated the idea that men are superior than women. Woolf asserted this position through the "looking-glass vision," in which she posits that, "[w]omen have served all these centuries as looking-glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural size." Thus, acting as looking-glasses of the society, women are then relegated to

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".