Patriarchy and Misogyny: What a Grand Ole Time
[2024-02-06 22:30:12]
When you think about ancient Greece you may think about togas, polytheism, magnificent heroes and olives. But how do you handle women? There are plenty of evidence in many scripts, epics, and other documents. Edips and Odyssey are two ancient Greek literary works that totally embodies their society. Ancient Greece is a patriarchal society, women are regarded as symbols of things and sex, misoperation often happened. In the Oedipu drama, hero Oedipus found some misoperation in the near future, made him blind, he found out that he fulfilled the prophecies of murdering his father and marrying his mother.
The source of "a disgusting woman" is "female hatred". But Guinness in Greece is more specifically "wife". Family, and perhaps beyond the country, patriarchal fortress. A "bad wife" is a person who can not transfer power to her husband and neglected to infringe or infringe the region traditionally dominated by him - money, sex, business, speech. In her recently published book "Girls: Logic of Disgusting Women", the philosopher Kate Man reveals how lesbianism is related to patriarchalism. This approach is based on the authority of a "strategic, compulsive and maintaining" male, and "when women divide jobs and roles and hurt patriarchal order: they are often arrogant, unruly hands It is considered unreachable or non-compliant. "Women continue to play a defined role like" loving mother, good wife, calm girlfriend, faithful secretary. " Women who have not followed (or are considered not obeying) women face a strong, often violent opposition
Mann supports different concepts of misogyny, which is a systematic aspect of power relations. Sinister relies on patriarchal - social structure requires women to love, subordinate, nurture and satisfy the needs of men. For example, if a woman does not meet patriarchal requirements, such as a woman being trying to become a leader, or not meeting the lewd and pure sexual norm imposed on a woman, the opposite would be Hillary Clinton and It is a sinister attitude to Bangladesh. In female acid attacks, this usually punishes women for refusing marriage or sexual acts.
The Greek poet Hesiad (about 700 BC) closely connected patriarchy with Misogi and his wife and house. Pandora, Hesiod is our earliest and most important source, often referred to as the first human woman (gynê), but as Jenny Strauss Clay shows, she is more accurate at first It is my wife. This deeply disgusting myth reveals catastrophes that happen when becoming a "bad wife" ignoring the supporting role of protecting the husband's authority in families and communities. In other words, the story constitutes the origin of the wife and requires that they be controlled by the patriarch.