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The Roles of Women in The Odyssey

By Roxanne Rhoads, published Nov 04, 2005
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Women in Ancient Greece were considered inferior to men, they could not mix with men and be part of the action. Very few had important roles, the world was dominated by men. Yet in Homer's Odyssey women played very important roles. Women were not meek little structures blended into the background, they were powerful and wise. They charmed and controlled the men, they provided wisdom and advice. Women took care of the men.

There is such a strong feminine attitude in The Odyssey that some scholars believe a woman or group of women could have written it. The way some things are worded in The Odyssey is purely feminine.

There are many strong female characters in The Odyssey.

The goddesses play very demanding, controlling roles. The most powerful is Athena. She makes things happen through the entire story. Then there is Calypso, she is so powerful she holds Odysseus captive for many years.

Among the mortal women there are also many wise and strong individuals; Helen, Arete, and Nausicaa. One of the most unique characters is Penelopia, Odysseus' wife. For many years she waits for Odysseus to come home. On the surface she may seem very meek, yet in reality she is very clever. For all those years she had to fend off the suitors. "... she has been deluding the wits of a whole nation. Hopes for all, promises for every man by special messenger- and what she means is quite different." (Homer 24)

Penelopia deluded all the suitors for quite some time by making the excuse that she had to weave a burial shroud for Laertes. Every day she sat weaving, then at night she pulled her work apart. Her clever wits put the suitors at bay until they discovered her plan. Once they found this out they were angry. One man made the comment that she had "... her head full of pride to think how Athena had been generous to her beyond all others, given her skill in beautiful work and good intelligence and cleverness such as never was heard of, even in the old stories." (Homer 24)

Takeaways
  • One of the most unique characters is Penelopia, Odysseus' wife.
  • The goddesses play very demanding, controlling roles.
Did You Know?
There are many strong female characters in The Odyssey.
Resources
  • Homer's The Odyssey
Comments
Comments 1 - 15 of 16
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this had awesome info on Penelope, but what about the others such as Circe, Calypo, or the Sirens?

Posted on 04/18/2008 at 4:04:08 PM

 
it was good i got good info up on it so yah it helped me out!!!!

Posted on 03/31/2008 at 2:03:47 PM

 
i think that this article needs more textual evidence, but it has pretty good information if someone needs to look something up.

Posted on 03/12/2008 at 8:03:24 PM

 
i hate this book

Posted on 02/12/2008 at 10:02:22 AM

 
this is exactly the info that i need for my english paper to get a ggod grade. -_-

Posted on 02/12/2008 at 9:02:09 AM

 
i dont ge this storey at all

Posted on 02/12/2008 at 9:02:55 AM

 
needs info on the women

Posted on 12/18/2007 at 1:12:55 PM

 
This is just what I was looking for. This holds just the information I need for my school assignment. I'm sure to get a good grade on it.

Posted on 12/12/2007 at 11:12:18 AM

 
this is very broad, and holds little information

Posted on 11/28/2007 at 1:11:00 PM

 
This article is poorly written and lacks any textual evidence. However, the main idea behind it is far from being utterly inaccurate and implausible. So, "whatever", Rhoads does have some idea of what she is saying, you're just criticizing with unwarranted severity. You, in fact, may arguably suck and have no idea what you are talking about.

Posted on 10/29/2007 at 7:10:00 PM

 
Well, "whatever" does make a harsh but accurate statement. This woman has no credit to her name for writing an article about literature, considering most of her works she has authored have been centered around sex.

Posted on 10/28/2007 at 6:10:00 PM

 
I disagree with WRONG that all the female characters are deceptive and treacherous. Arete and Naussicaa are certainly not deceptive. Did you notice the way Odysseus speaks to Arete before her husband, King Alcinous? And all the freedom she has? She makes plenty of decision which normally only Alcinous would make. Naussicaa even tells Odysseus "never mind my father but go up to my mother". i agree with you about penelope though. You can also include the sirens as deceptive if you want to cover everyone. Helen is also deceptive. if you look at her recount of the battle at troy. When she whipsers the names of the soldiers it can be interpreted that she is being treacherous. also when she slips the herbs into their drinks. (i know this story well, i have a 3 hour exam on this in a few weeks! argh!)

Posted on 10/07/2007 at 3:10:00 AM

 
Yeah I agree with whatever. Odysseus is the main character and he is male. All the female characters, although powerful, are deceptive and treacherous. This is indicative of the way women were perceived at the time, as men believed they couldn't be trusted. Yes Athena plays a prominent and important part within the poem but she is an idealised version of a woman. She has both masculine and feminine qualities, she was born from man (Zeus gave birth to her through his mouth, she isn't married and is a virgin plus she is still under the control of a man (Zeus). Penelope is seen to be deceptive too (eg. the weaving and unweaving of the shroud) yet this is not condemned because she is using this characteristic to benefit her husband. As long as woman are helping men they are not criticised because it was a male dominated society.

Posted on 09/11/2007 at 6:09:00 AM

 
this sucks. you have no idea what you're talking about. are you a high schooler?

Posted on 05/15/2007 at 2:05:00 PM

 
needs more information on the women of the odyssey

Posted on 03/31/2007 at 1:03:00 PM

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