Lysistrata Essay

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    Feminism In Lysistrata

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    Lysistrata is centered around a strong willed woman named Lysistrata. She is tired of the continuous war between Sparta and Athens, so she decides to take action. Lysistrata devises up a plan to convince all of the Athenian women to deprive their husbands of sex to end the Peloponnesian War. Most of the Athenian women cannot go along with the idea. At this time, sex is considered to be a women’s main pleasure in life. Naturally, the thought of boycotting sex is outrageous. Eventually, Lysistrata

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    Lysistrata Essay

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    laughing at itself anymore; it’s too tense, and this is why we’re so divided and paralyzed as a nation. If there was one society that knew how to laugh at itself, it was ancient Greece – specifically, ancient Greece in the time of Lysistrata1. Lysistrata remains famous all of these

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    Patriarchy In Lysistrata

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    the qualities men desire, in effect giving authority to men. Another result of women’s economic dependence on men is the requirement that women become wives or risk losing their livelihood. In becoming wives, women are restricted further. In Lysistrata, Lysistrata advises the women to “give in- but be bad

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    Satire In Lysistrata

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    comedy, Lysistrata, uses satire to show the issue of war between ancient Greek cities and uses women and sex as a weapon to explain the futility of war. Aristophanes’ was a playwright, landowner and political representative in Athens born around 450 BCE. He is considered by many to be like Father of Ancient Comedy. All of Aristophanes’ comedies show commentary on the contemporary society and the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. The comedy that I will be analyzing today, Lysistrata, was produced

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    Analysis Of Lysistrata

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    In Aristophanes’ play Lysistrata, the plot is during the middle of the Peloponnesian war. The title character Lysistrata, is a Athenian woman who has convened a meeting with the women whose husbands are off fighting in the war. Lysistrata arranges the meeting in order to propose a solution to ending the war which includes the women withholding sex from their husbands. Initially, the women don’t like the idea of her plan but soon come to agree with her after realizing that it may be the only way to

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    right? Right! Aristophanes play “Lysistrata” is exactly that, but with a twist. The play takes its name from the main female heroine, you guessed it, Lysistrata, an Athenian woman with a plan to stop the Peloponnessian war. Taking an in depth look on how, we can look at her leadership qualities that helped to make this happen in the play. From keeping the woman in line, to depriving the men of sex, just how does she do it? First lets examine creativity. Lysistrata hatches a plan to put an end to

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    Women In Lysistrata

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    current generation. Aristophanes Lysistrata, takes that idea and turns it on its head, proving beyond a shadow of a doubt that people have always been sexual beings with appetites similar to our own. Aristophanes excels at the bawdy double entendre and certainly this play can be enjoyed as nothing more than what it presents itself as, a farcical sexual comedy, but that would be doing it a great disservice. Aristophanes used the comedic situations and the women in Lysistrata and their struggle against a

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    Women In Lysistrata

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    falsity a plausible reality. Set during a break in the Peloponnesian War, Lysistrata tells the tale of a woman who convinced her fellow female citizens of Athens and those from other poleis that they could end the war through restricting sexual intercourse with their husbands, who just so happened to come home from the battlefield. Filled with crude phallic jokes, cross-dressing, and painful erections, the play Lysistrata by Aristophanes gives a comedic and somewhat accurate interpretation of the

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    Bernstein, Elizabeth Dr. Thomas Haeussler CWL 320 M/W 8am Essay One: Lysistrata Lysistrata is an example of a comedic story that can apply to many generations, cultures and intellects. With Aristophanes’ combination of witty, bawdy, vulgar, yet thematic comedy, it offers its readers a story for the ages. What I found to be the most humorous aspect of Lysistrata was the juxtaposition of how the comedy was initially intended to be viewed at the time it was written, and what makes it funny in today’s

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    In the play Lysistrata, Aristophanes imagines the women of Greece "fighting" for peace with a very elemental, and essentially feminine, weapon: sexual blackmail. An Athenian woman named Lysistrata plans to convince women to abstain from sex in order to end the war between the men of Greece. Lysistrata brings the Spartan and Theban women into the plan as well. Her idea was to not just starve the Athenian men of sex, but men on all sides of the conflict. She hoped that this would bring them to the

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