while ancient Greek religion is far less morally satisfying than Christianity, its inspired literature is just the opposite, far removed from the simplistic good-vs-evil binary of fiction inspired from monotheism, the poets of Greece and Rome ("poet" is a lose term here, since "poets" were really a complicated amalgam of musician, historian, author and teacher in varying degrees) were not afraid to be frank about the nature of both man and woman.
one of my favorite themes in Greco-Roman mythology is the tendency of women to recruit younger males (often sons) against their older male lovers, husbands, fathers, etc. a few examples include Gaia giving Cronos a sickle to cut off Oranos's genitalia, Rhea repeating this pattern in her recruitment of Zeus to rescue his brethren from the belly of Cronos and Demeter attempting to turn the human boy Demophon into a god in order to gain a co-conspirator against Zeus for giving Persephone in marriage to Hades.
indeed, the Greeks, while often unfair to woman, was also more bold in its illustrations of female evil. if man is autocratic, proud and impulsive, woman is treacherous, manipulative, passive-aggressive and vindictive.
PS: a good portion of this (maybe 70%) comes straight from Elizabeth Vandiver; however, where she attributes it largely to misogyny, I think it's a fairly accurate take on much of female psychology, in much the same way that the vices of the many heroes of the Trojan War represent many of the common vices of man's nature.
PPS: as with all things: "not all men/women", and there are plenty of exceptions to these trends such Hector, Psyche, Iphigenia, etc. There are also others with vices more typical of the other gender (Artemis, Narcissus, etc) and examples where the tendencies mentioned above were arguably completely justified (Clytemnestra's conspiracy with her lover to murder her husband in vengeance for her daughter)
one of my favorite themes in Greco-Roman mythology is the tendency of women to recruit younger males (often sons) against their older male lovers, husbands, fathers, etc. a few examples include Gaia giving Cronos a sickle to cut off Oranos's genitalia, Rhea repeating this pattern in her recruitment of Zeus to rescue his brethren from the belly of Cronos and Demeter attempting to turn the human boy Demophon into a god in order to gain a co-conspirator against Zeus for giving Persephone in marriage to Hades.
indeed, the Greeks, while often unfair to woman, was also more bold in its illustrations of female evil. if man is autocratic, proud and impulsive, woman is treacherous, manipulative, passive-aggressive and vindictive.
PS: a good portion of this (maybe 70%) comes straight from Elizabeth Vandiver; however, where she attributes it largely to misogyny, I think it's a fairly accurate take on much of female psychology, in much the same way that the vices of the many heroes of the Trojan War represent many of the common vices of man's nature.
PPS: as with all things: "not all men/women", and there are plenty of exceptions to these trends such Hector, Psyche, Iphigenia, etc. There are also others with vices more typical of the other gender (Artemis, Narcissus, etc) and examples where the tendencies mentioned above were arguably completely justified (Clytemnestra's conspiracy with her lover to murder her husband in vengeance for her daughter)
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