Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Beuschel 1 Grant Beuschel Abigail Heinger World Masterpieces I 29 April 2015 What are Women? Thoughts from the Ancient Mediterranean Epic When ancient Greece is mentioned, one tends to think of two things: either the great strength of the ancient warriors, or the mythology passed down in their epics. Both of these lack a female figure as the hero who saves everyone from the wrath of the gods or titans or warring countries. Further back in time and not so far from the Eastern Mediterranean was Sumer. From the Sumerian culture sprung the Epic of Gilgamesh which also lacked a woman taking power and saving the people. Why is this? Masterpieces of the ancient Mediterranean display a clear sexism with the vacancy of women heroes, yet women are not powerless despite the focus on the strength of men. Before discussing the epic, the purpose of an epic must be analyzed. Back in the ancient world, stories were not recorded using writing. Rather, they were passed on by ear since this was a much more efficient method for their story to spread. Since a human would have to memorize important cultural information, the epics were used to pass on what it means to be a person of that culture. Descriptions of what the hero wore, how he acted, and what he valued were used as the model of the ideal person. Also, the values shown in the epics carried over to all artwork that arose during their time. In the epic of Gilgamesh, there are two main characters: Gilgamesh and Enkidu. Enkidu acts more as Gilgamesh’s sidekick and balance, but he is still a heroic figure as he is the only one who can stand up Gilgamesh. In the story, women are used for two functions. The first is sex. Beuschel 2 Sex is what naturalizes Enkidu and makes him human. It is what the king does to women to show his dominance. However, women do not get to dominate in the role of sex. This can clearly be seen from Gilgamesh raping all of the women in the village when they get married. Another example is Gilgamesh’s return to Uruk after slaying Humbuba in tablet VI. The goddess Ishtar has lust for Gilgamesh and even wants to marry him. Yet, he does not comply with her wishes and does not feel the need to even though she is a divine being. This refusal stems from the Sumerian belief that women are subject to men in every role. The second function of women is giving advice. When Gilgamesh does not know what to do, he consults his mother, Ninsun. Ninsun is the one who blesses his friendship with Enkidu and advises him before he sets out to kill Humbuba. Utnapishtim’s wife convinces him to give Gilgamesh some type of gift before sending him away from their land after failing the test for immortality in tablet 12. If women are the givers of advice, they must be wise beings. However, the strength and power of a man seems to be more important to the Sumerians than the wisdom possessed by the woman. The Greek epic, the Odyssey, contains very similar values to that of the Sumerians. The beginning of the epic starts with the queen, who is the hero’s wife, unable to remove the suitors from her presence, suggesting she lacks power. However, she is shown to have wisdom when she says she will take a suitor after knitting a burial shroud for her father in law. In the middle of the night, she would undo all the work she did in the day, so she would never actually finish the shroud and take a suitor. This wit of the woman is shown twice more with her test of her husband and the marriage bed and yet again with an archery competition to choose a suitor where the task was something only Odysseus could do. Eventually, her wit brings about the death of the suitors, but only through her heroic husband shooting them all down. Thus, wisdom is not power, rather Beuschel 3 it is more of a tool for survival, and it seems women have more of it to the Greeks. This does not mean they believe wisdom is exclusively the power of a woman, however. Odysseus survives both the sirens and the cyclops by outwitting them. In the other Homeric epic, the Iliad, the human women have no active roles, yet the entire war going on throughout the epic is over the beautiful woman, Helen. The men are the only ones fighting on the battlefield, and most of the story focuses on what is going on in that battlefield as well as what the gods are doing. The two main heroes in the epic are Hector and Achilles. Both have great strength and honor, which are very manly traits in the Greek world. Women are spoils of war, merely objects. Achilles’ argument with Agamemnon was over Agamemnon stealing the concubine he won. Honor is more important than staying with the loving wife. Hector does not listen to his wife when she begs him not to go back into battle. He argues that he would be shamed if he did not fight. Unlike the Sumerian goddesses, Greek goddesses do not fall under this same inferiority as human women. The fight between Zeus and Hera on Mount Olympus shows that gods and goddesses are equal. Hera continues to defy her husband Zeus, and other gods and goddesses such as Athena and Poseidon support her. She uses her sexuality to overpower Zeus twice and put him to sleep. Eventually, the Greeks whom she supports win the war. The Roman love story between Cupid and Psyche is closer to having a woman hero than any other at the time. After being banished from Cupid’s home back to the earth, Psyche wants nothing else but to get back to Cupid. Immediately, she starts on a quest to find Cupid. The goddess Venus gives her several tasks to complete which are nearly impossible. For each one, some other man has to help her, otherwise she would do nothing but sit and cry. Cupid persuades the ants to help her sort the grain. The river god tells her how to get the golden fleece from the Beuschel 4 sheep. During the third task she wants to commit suicide, and if a voice would not have called to her while she was on the tower, she would have done it. Even after all the help she is given, she still finds a way to mess up her quest by opening the box she was told not open. This puts her into a coma which finally ends her ability to carry out her quest. In the end, Cupid swoops in and finishes her quest for her. The many times that she gets help suggest the Romans did not think women were capable of solving their own problems. When they cannot figure something out, they just cry. Crying would have been a weakness to them. Although it was not explicitly written, it can be assumed that the voice that kept her from killing herself was a man because this action saved her. She did manage to begin her quest by herself which means that women can come up with ideas for things they want to do, but then they cannot actually carry them out without a man. One redeeming quality this story does show is women can have monogamous love. Rather than abandoning hope of ever seeing Cupid, the immortal who banished her, again Psyche commits herself fully to finding him. She is the most beautiful human in the world, so she could have had any man she wanted at any time. However, she only wanted to have cupid back. Mediterranean art also displays this same sexism. Art was used to tell stories more often than writing since making one sculpture was easier than writing a book, and more people could understand a story in art than could read at the time. Most artwork displayed heroes in a certain way. They were always men, and these heroic men were always naked. Their nakedness was a form of naturalism. This symbolized the idea that the hero is born naturally. In other words, you were either born a hero or not a hero. They tend to look either confident or expressionless. This showed their sense of resolve and clarity. No matter what situation, the hero would be able to get through since heroes are always looked at as brave. Heroes were not passive; they took action in Beuschel 5 saving the people or becoming great in some way, shape, or form. This was no different in the artwork. The hero is most often the one doing the action. Perseus and Andromeda The Perseus and Andromeda painting depicts Perseus rescuing Andromeda from being sacrificed to a sea monster. His past heroism is displayed on his belt with the head of Medusa. The winged feet portray him as swift while the sword claims he is powerful in battle. The nakedness is the sign of him as a natural hero. He is holding up Andromeda’s arm as representation that men are the ones who hold women up. She is already standing on the rock while he is climbing up which suggests that the male hero is the one who has to work for the woman. Andromeda is clothed showing that the woman is not the hero. The lines in this painting explain what is happening. Both Perseus and Andromeda are standing straight up and down, suggesting both are important to the story. Perseus’ leg is raised but not at a diagonal. His leg is also standing on a rock which looks like a pose of strength. His arm is at a diagonal, showing it is in action. This action is holding up Andromeda. His sword is horizontal in this picture, making it passive. This means that whatever Perseus is doing is without the intent of harm. Andromeda is standing on a rock that is slanted. This could be suggesting that she would eventually slide off the rock and need someone to catch her. There is a Beuschel 6 wave or sea monster or something in the background next to Andromeda’s feet. It is a diagonal which gives uncertainty of its intent. The Getty Kouros A kouros statue was a grave marker for a male used by the Greeks, though sometimes these were also used in temples. Many kouros were probably men who died in war. This would explain why these statues seem to be just ordinary men. Yet, they are still sculpted in the Greek heroic style. This Ghetty Kouros is taking a step forward showing he is ready to have action. He is smiling showing his confidence. His nakedness represents heroism. His arms are relaxed at his side since he has no worry. There is nothing he needs to handle at this point, but in contrast his muscular body and straight figure display his strength. He has no diagonal lines from the front, but from the side, one of his legs has a diagonal line, which suggests he is boldly moving forward. This statue is exceptionally tall, which emphasizes his importance and power. Phrasikleia Beuschel 7 A kore statue is a female version of the kouros statue. Phrasikleia is one of these kore statues which was a grave mark for a woman dating back to 550 BC. There are many noticeable differences between this statue and a kouros. She is fully clothed which is emphasized by her right arm gripping the side of her dress. This dress goes down past her feet. She would not be able to run and do battle in type of dress like that. Her left arm is horizontal, which is a passive position. Both of these observations suggest that she is not doing anything. She is holding something in her left arm, but it is not clear what the object is. Whatever object she is holding, it does not appear to be powerful. Despite not being able to do anything, she is smiling, meaning she is happy. She is content with not doing anything. The fact that the statue is tall says the subject was still an important person; she just was not a hero. C. B. Davis wrote his paper on how voice inflections change the interpretation of theater. Mr. Davis suggested that women do have power which is mainly expressed through seduction. They could bend a man's will by pretending to come on to him. Since men desire sex, they comply. One of the things women use in their seduction is their voice. He cites Odysseus and the Sirens as a reference for this claim. The sirens were very beautiful female creatures that would lure sailors to their rocky coast they lived on and inevitably their deaths. To do this, they used music and more particularly their singing voices. Odysseus had his men all plug their ears so they would not be lured in by the music of the sirens. We can still see the power of their music in this same story, however. Odysseus did not have his ears plugged; rather he had his men tie him to a pole and not listen to him no matter what he said. When they passed by the sirens, Odysseus screamed at his men to turn the boat to the sirens, but they did not listen to him. Because Odysseus and his men survived the sirens, this shows the wit of men trumps the wit of women. Beuschel 8 C. B. Davis also touches on how multiple voices, or ventriloquism, are used in the Homeric epics. He distinguishes that there are different purposes for when a man or woman uses multiple voices. Men will mask their voice purely for manipulation. Women who use the same technique are either "deceitful sorceresses" or possessed by a divine being or a demon. From this observation, it would seem that only human males naturally have the ability to mimic a voice while a woman must receive this power from an outside source. Furthermore, since this gift is used for manipulation, men must have more evil in them than women. When the wooden horse is being brought into Troy, Helen imitates the wives of the soldiers in the horse. This only does not work because Odysseus keeps his men quiet. Davis explained that Helen was made to do this through a god. She could not have come up with this plan on her own. However, her ability to mimic the wives’ voices was her own. Lauren Peterson analyzed how Greek men have control over women, and this control is what makes the men dominate the women. Because they dominate the women, the men become the most important figures and thus they are the centers of the epics. Men would produce vases with artwork on it showing females toiling at work. They would then give these vases to the women to use. From the pictures on the vases, the women would learn the tasks they had to do in the household. Basically, women were manipulated into being the slaves of men by teaching the women how to be slaves at a young age. Since women were not allowed to choose whom they would marry, they would be forced into an unfamiliar place with an unfamiliar man to do his bidding. Peterson uses the example of Persephone being a slave to Hades reluctantly but forcefully. She supported the idea that women did nothing to try to become stronger and more important because they desired to be desired by a man. Men had more desire for working women. Therefore, they kept right at being slaves for men. Beuschel 9 Dianna Kardulias examined the 5th book in the Odyssey. In this book, she comments that the gods and goddess, mainly the goddess Calypso, are switching Odysseus’ mindset from war to normal life. Calypso uses her female body to civilize Odysseus. This is much like how the prostitute was used in the Epic of Gilgamesh to civilize Enkidu. The gods make Calypso give up her affair after a time so Odysseus can return to his homeland. She complains that gods get to have their affairs whenever they want, but she, a goddess, does not get to keep her one affair. From this, it seems that the gods have some power over the goddesses. Kardulias’ main argument in her article is how Odysseus must put on femininity to save himself after Poseidon attempted to drown him. The goddess Ino makes Odysseus put on her headdress. This allows him to safely make it to shore. This headdress was a type of clothing that only females would wear. She makes the point that men would never have touched a feminine article of clothing because they have no use for it. This means that the hero had to put on femininity to continue his quest home. The episode described suggests that the Greeks believed sometimes a man must act like a woman to achieve his goal, which contradicts anything said up until now. This quandary is resolved by Odysseus returning the veil after he is saved, signifying his transformation back into a man. The quest in Cupid and Psyche is similar enough to this part of Odysseus’ quest that it does not contradict the Greek idea that woman cannot complete quests. Odysseus’ quest was not complete after he was rescued from Poseidon’s storm. Because of this, it was not the female part of Odysseus that actually completed the quest; the femininity only took part rather. Similarly, Psyche could not complete her quest. She only took part in it. Both quests still reach their end when the man finishes the objective and returns home with the wife. Beuschel 10 Ancient Mediterranean works show a huge bias against women. The only powers women have are seduction, deception, and wit. None of these powers are ever good enough to give them heroine status. Not even Psyche, who was at least allowed to start a quest, was good enough to complete it. Artwork displays women as weak and passive compared to men, who are depicted as strong, active, and brave. Women are little more than slaves who must do the bidding of men. Sexism had a huge influence on ancient cultures, and this clearly showed through their recorded history. Beuschel 11 Works cited Apuleius, Lucius. “Cupid and Psyche.” January 11, 2001. Web. Davis, C. B. "Distant Ventriloquism: Vocal Mimesis, Agency and Identity in Ancient Greek Performance." Theater Journal 55.1 (2003): 45-65. Project MUSE [John Hopkins UP]. Web. 17 Mar. 2015. The Epic of Gilgamesh. AINA. Assyrian International News Agency Books Online. Web. Jan. 2015. The Getty Kouros. Digital image. The J. Paul Getty Museum. The J. Paul Getty Trust, n.d. Web. 4 Mar. 2015. "The Iliad." The Iliad. The Internet Classics Archive, n.d. Web. Feb. 2015. Kardulias, Dianna Rhyan. "Odysseus in Ino's Veil: Feminine Headdress and the Hero in Odyssey 5." Transactions of the American Philological Association 131.1 (2001): 23-51. Project MUSE [Johns Hopkins UP]. Web. 16 Mar. 2015. Perseus and Andromeda. Digital image. Theoi. Theoi Project, 2011. Web. 4 Mar. 2015. Petersen, Lauren Hackworth. "Divided Consciousness and Female Companionship: Reconstructing Female Subjectivity on Greek Vases." Arethusa 30.1 (1997): 35-74. Project MUSE [Johns Hopkins UP]. Web. 28 Apr. 2015. "The Odyssey." The Odyssey. The Internet Classics Archive, n.d. Web. Feb. 2015. Schermann, John, and Sonya Schermann. Kore. Digital image. National Archaeological Museum of Athens. Scherminator, 2006. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.