"Gender roles in lysistrata and medea" Essays and Research Papers

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    Medea Chorus Role

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    The Role of the Chorus in Medea An important element in ancient Greek tragedies is the chorus‚ a near constant presence that typically played little to no role in the events that take place in the plays. In Medea‚ this idea stands true. The Chorus in Medea consists of Corinthian women‚ who mostly just lament the horrific things that are happening throughout the play. Euripides‚ the creator of the tragedy‚ seems to use the Chorus as an outside perspective‚ using them to illustrate his themes. The

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    Chorus Role in Medea

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    The Chorus influences our response to Medea and her actions in both a positive and negative manner. The Chorus‚ a body of approximately fifteen Corinthian women who associate the audience with the actors‚ is able to persuade and govern us indirectly through sympathy for what has been done to Medea‚ a princess of Colchis and the victim of her husband’s betrayal of love for another woman. The Chorus also lead us to through sympathy for Medea to accept her decision of taking revenge on princess Glauce

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    The Role of Women in Medea

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    Medea is the tragic tale of a woman scorned. It was written in 431 B.C. by the Greek playwright‚ Euripides. Eruipides was the first Greek poet to suffer the fate of so many of the great modern writers: rejected by most of his contemporaries (he rarely won first prize and was the favorite target for the scurrilous humor of the comic poets)‚ he was universally admired and revered by the Greeks of the centuries that followed his death(“Norton Anthology”). Euripides showed

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    Ellen Myers Lit Journal 1/26/09 Journal Topic: The Role of Women in Medea “We women are the most unfortunate creatures‚” Medea states in her lecture to the women of Corinth. During the time of Euripides‚ women were not of high stature or power in their societies. They were traditionally confined to the roles of housekeeper‚ mother‚ mistress‚ wife‚ etc. Medea is ahead of her time; she is not defenseless and weak‚ in fact she proves herself to be quite powerful and revolutionary. She

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    Lysistrata

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    Lysistrata is a play about female agency in 5th century BCE Greece. What makes the sources of its humor different from those in The Acharnians or The Clouds? What comic truth does it try to convey that makes it different? Is the woman’s revolution it depicts permanent or temporary? Lysistrata is Aristophanes’ peace play‚ Compared with Acharnians and clouds‚ the protagonist of this play is a woman. Angry with the way men have devastated Greece through their love for the war‚ she arranges a group

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    Antigone And Lysistrata

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    (Della Gatta). Remarkably then‚ Antigone and Lysistrata both feature strong and assertive titular heroines‚ despite the androcentric culture in which they were were conceived and performed. Rather than challenging the patriarchal organization of society‚ however‚ these plays reinforce the slanted male characterization of women as inferior because men performed all of the roles and because Sophocles and Aristophanes wrote their plays for an entirely

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    lysistrata

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    Lysistrata Characters: Lysistrata -  Lysistrata is an Athenian woman who is sick and tired of war and the treatment of women in Athens. Lysistrata gathers the women of Sparta and Athens together to solve these social ills and finds success and power in her quest. Lysistrata is the least feminine of the women from either Athens or Sparta‚ and her masculinity helps her gain respect among the men. Cleonice- is the next-door neighbor of Lysistrata and is the first to show up at Lysistrata’s meeting

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    up her country‚ committed murder and made herself an outcast‚ for the love of Jason‚ Medea was rightly angry when she was cast aside in favour of another younger woman. Recognising the prejudice and indifferent treatment to women of that time‚ Euripides used Medea as a representation of all women’s feelings and experiences‚ embodying pain‚ jealousy‚ passion and unfairness‚ especially in a family breakdown. Medea became a spokeswoman for them but he creates her as an antithesis of the common idea

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    Euripides Gender Roles

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    The Role of Gender in the Works of Euripides and Aristophanes Ancient Greek society was patriarchal in the sense that males held all the power and authority and consequentially had rights and privileges that women did not. For their part‚ Athenian women in particular were viewed as highly emotive creatures whose only duties in society were to bare children and serve their husbands. Athens‚ a city that prided itself on its democratic traditions and freedoms‚ paradoxically were very oppressive

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    Lysistrata Analysis

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    The story‚ Lysistrata by Aristophanes has been a major influence on many literatures because of the ludicrous comedy and ton of sex puns. The movie‚ Chi-Raq used many elements from the original play to create a modern version of the story. Even though both stories were created in different ways‚ there are also similar because of the many references that were still original content. There are many interesting similarities that are different in both works. One of the similar elements in both the playwright

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