Towards the beginning of the passage, the author develops the plot using a myth-like element called “damsel in distress” in one of the text’s specific events.
English First Semester Final Essay To many readers, the most enjoyable stories are the ones that take place without sorrow, and betrayal. While these are both tragic topics, some pieces of literature are fantastic, while still broaching topics that may be harmful to the characters themselves. In the novel Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya, the play A Midsummer’s Night Dream by William Shakespeare, and the novella The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, all contain examples of the these specific topics. These pieces of literature all share common themes of family, magic, and betrayal.
It is significant that nearly every major character makes an allusion to one or more Ovidian myths, suggesting their awareness, as well as the audience’s familiarity, with Ovid’s texts. This is made most obvious with Titus’ declaration of revenge, in which he invokes an Ovidian narrative, “For worse than Philomel you used my daughter, and worse than Procne I will be revenged” (Act V, Scene II). The characters are strangely and unnervingly aware that their lives are constructed and defined by Ovidian principles. Moreover, the characters employ the model of the Metamorphoses as a basis of their actions. For instance, Aaron, the primary villain of Titus Andronicus who first plants the machinations of Lavinia’s rape, instructs Tamora and her sons, “Philomel must lose her tongue today,” (Act II, Scene I).
His punishment was to be eternally bound to a mountain while an eagle fed on his liver daily. Another punishment was the creation of a woman named Pandora who was to be married to Prometheus’s brother. As a wedding gift, she was given a box and told not to open it, which of course, curiously, she did, releasing all the evils in the world today. As she closed the box, only hope remained, locked
The book Odyssey is about a man named Odysseus trying to return home from a long war. He comes across countless of challenges during this trip and meet countless new people while losing others. Both of Homer and Maupassant protagonist’s partners are faithful to them even though their partners have been lousy. After waiting years and years, Odysseus’s wife gives up, “My husband being long gone, long out of mind.”
The book is infused with the belief that powerful gods and goddesses interfere with moral beings. The author describes family as loyalty. Odysseus' quest to return home to his family shows his great devotion towards his wife and son. Penolope shows her loyalty by longing to be reunited with her husband and refusing to get remarried. Society in the book is reflected on ancient Greek values and norms.
He had disobeyed and given fire to the men. Un example is on the page 1 and 2 Zeus was very angry and ordered to chain a Prometheus to a mountain to suffer there for all eternity. And Prometheus remained, thinking about the future, happy knowing that he had given fire to men”. As we can see the attempt and although he received a punishment he was happy and that is the important thing, try so that maybe in
She is particularly drawn to female characters who, at some point in their stories, triumph over a male figure, or the concept of masculinity more generally. Mythology becomes so significant to Esch that she begins to describe events in her life in mythological terms, most notably the hurricane the arrives at the end of the novel. Esch’s recurrent references to myths, particularly the female characters, serve to emphasize the connection between femininity and strength that prevails even in her male-dominated environment. Esch is surrounded by male characters, including her father, brothers, and friends, who do not believe in the power of womanhood that is exemplified in Greek mythology.
“The Odyssey,” written by Greek poet Homer is an epic tale depicting the brutally enduring quest home of the Greek hero, Odysseus. Within this heroic story, women play a very large and pivotal role in Odysseus’s trip home from the Trojan War. In his attempt to get back to his wife, Penelope, Odysseus’s progress is constantly hindered by the intervention of women who will do anything in order to either convince the heroic figure to stay with them or have him killed. The intentions of the women in the epic are all very different but one of the most prominent roles lies in the seductresses and the alluring women who will deeply influence Odysseus. Most importantly, Penelope plays a large role in portraying the importance of women’s roles in the story.
Odysseus, just like the woman, has to live with the losses and the suffering of the war, while his dead comrades, like the widow’s husband, do not. In this instance, the woman is representative of all the women in the Trojan War who lost their husbands due to Odysseus’ wrath. He does not cry for his own glory, but rather he empathizes with the widow, and therefore, identifies with all of his victims. Alcinous, through this similarity between Odysseus’ tears and the tears of the female victims of war, is able to see that Odysseus’ connection to the Trojan War is one filled with the pain of losses and guilt, but also the pain of having to carry these memories. These two aspects of pain can only coexist in a person if his identity is the Odysseus being portrayed in these songs.
The whole conflict is based on whether or not Pandora can control her curiosity and listen to the wise words that tell her she cannot open it. The theme is further installed in the middle of the myth because Pandora can not get the box out of her mind and she does something she would regret. The text shows this when the author writes, “Half fearfully and half eagerly she lifted the
Through the successes of the characters, society can learn the prime example to follow while the failures of the characters display what actions to not follow. First, the Greeks exhibit the benefits of loyalty through the faithfulness Penelope and Eumaeus reveal. For twenty
This underlying theme is especially prevalent in how Homer portrays male characters. We see this theme exemplified in Homer’s portrayal of Odysseus in which Odysseus uses guilt as a way to shift the blame from himself onto others. As well as how those who receive this blame and how they react. This is illustrated when we hear from Calypso as she describes the double standard that has shaped her life. As she expresses to the world “You rivaled lords of jealousy---scandalized when goddesses sleep with mortals” (Homer 11).
In relation to Dracula, the reader is never told how Dracula became a vampire. However, Van Helsing hints that as Dracula must have battled against the Turks “he was spoken of as the cleverest and the most cunning, as well as the bravest of the sons of the “land beyond the forest””(Stoker 224). In Dr Seward’s diary, Van Helsing learns from the researches of his friend Arminius of Buda-Pesth that Dracula “was in life the most wonderful man. Soldier, statesman, and alchemist—which latter was the highest development of the science- knowledge of his time. He had a mighty brain, a learning beyond compare, and a heart that knew no fear and no remorse” (Stoker 280).
To accomplish this analyzation I have structured this paper into an intro paragraph, four body paragraphs, and a conclusion paragraph. The first body paragraph explains how Penelope’s forced marriage with Odysseus supports the patriarchy. The second paragraph analyzes Penelope’s character, and how the story diminishes her character to make men seem more powerful. The third paragraph dives into the relationship with the suitors and Penelope. I analyze how Penelope uses her situation to her advantage, and how that undermines the patriarchy.