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Lysistrata

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Title: Lysistrata


1
Lysistrata
  • I. Short introduction of Greek comedy
  • A. By the fifth century B.C. both tragedy and
    comedy were regularly produced at the winter
    festivals of the god Dionysus in Athens.
  • B. Comedy employed some elements like tragedy,
    but its tone was burlesque and parodic .

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Lysistrata
  • C. The only comic poet of fifth century whose
  • work has survived is Aristophenanes.
  • D. In his comedies, the institutions and
  • personalities of his time are caricatured
  • and criticized in a combination of poetry
  • and obscenity, of farce and wit.

3
Lysistrata
  • II. About Aristophanes
  • A. He was born sometime in the middle of
    fifth century and died in the next, around 385
    B.C.
  • B. The bulk of his extant work dates from the
    years of the Peloponnesian War
  • C. The war, in fact, is one of his comic
    targets

4
Lysistrata
  • D. His famous works The Acharnians, Peace,
    Clouds, Birds.
  • F. These plays are all very funny, with
    plenty of sexual wit.
  • G. But coarse humor and exquisite wit combine
    with lyric poetry of a high quality and comic
    plots of startling audacity to produce a mixture
    unlike anything that went before or has come
    after it.

5
Lysistrata
  • III. About Lysistrata
  • A. It is the outstanding play among the
    Aristophenanic comedies.
  • B. This play is about the female sex-strike
    against war.
  • C. Aristophanes through Lysistrata claims
    that war shall be the concern of Women!

6
Lysistrata
  • IV. Characters
  • A. Lysistrata -  Lysistrata is an Athenian woman
    who is sick and tired of war and the treatment of
    women in Athens. Lysistrata gathers the women of
    Sparta and Athens together to solve these social
    ills and finds success and power in her quest.
    Lysistrata is the least feminine of the women
    from either Athens or Sparta, and her masculinity
    helps her gain respect among the men.

7
Lysistrata
  • B. Kleonike -  Kleonike is the next-door neighbor
    of Lysistrata and is the first to show up at
    Lysistrata's meeting of women. Kleonike embraces
    her feminine side and is delighted that
    Lysistrata's scheme for peace .
  • C. Myrrhine -  Myrrhine would be the second
    strongest woman in Lysistrata. Myrrhine is able
    to seduce her husband, Kinesias, but she refuses
    sex with him just at the last minute.

8
Lysistrata
  • D. Lampito -  Lampito is representative of
    Spartan women. Lampito is a large, well-built
    woman who brings the Spartan women into
    Lysistrata's plan.

9
Lysistrata
  • E. Chorus of Old Men -  The Chorus of Old Men
    live up to their title the chorus is made up of
    twelve old men who teeter around Athens
    attempting to keep the women in line. Although,
    unsuccessful in their civic duties, the Chorus of
    Old Men strike up some fantastical misogynistic
    melodies and are a generally comedic element of
    the play.

10
Lysistrata
  • F. Chorus of Old Women -  The Chorus of Old Women
    seizes and then protects the Akropolis from the
    Chorus of Old Men. The Chorus of Old Women,
    although frail, fights to the last with the men
    and finds victory in the end.

11
Lysistrata
  • G. Peace -  Lysistrata's handmaid. Peace is the
    unclothed beauty of a woman whom Lysistrata
    displays and uses during her final plea for peace
    between Athens and Sparta. Terribly aroused and
    uncomfortable, the men quickly discuss the terms
    of a truce, all the while staring at Peace's
    body.

12
Lysistrata
  • H. Commissioner of Public Safety -  The
    Commissioner of Public Safety is apparently the
    head of security and law in Athens, but is
    completely overwhelmed by the women and ends up
    being dressed as a woman himself. Lysistrata has
    a lengthy conversation with the Commissioner
    about the future of Athens and peace in the
    region, but the Commissioner is very slow to
    understand her logic.

13
Lysistrata
  • I. Kinesias -  The needy, desperate clown that
    Myrrhine calls her husband. Kinesias is the first
    man to be affected by the sex strike and comes to
    the Akropolis, fully inflamed.

14
Lysistrata
  • V. Summary
  • Lysistrata has planned a meeting between all of
    the women of Greece to discuss the plan to end
    the Peloponnesian War. As Lysistrata waits for
    the women of Sparta, Thebes, and other areas to
    meet her she curses the weakness of women.
    Lysistrata plans to ask the women to refuse sex
    with their husbands until a treaty for peace has
    been signed. Lysistrata has also made plans with
    the older women of Athens (the Chorus of Old
    Women) to seize the Akropolis later that day.

15
Lysistrata
  • The women from the various regions finally
    assemble and Lysistrata convinces them to swear
    an oath that they will withhold sex from their
    husbands until both sides sign a treaty of peace.
    As the women sacrifice a bottle of wine to the
    Gods in celebration of their oath, they hear the
    sounds of the older women taking the Akropolis,
    the fortress that houses the treasury of Athens.

16
Lysistrata
  • In Lysistrata there are two chorusesthe Chorus
    of Old Men and the Chorus of Old Women. The
    Chorus of Men is first to appear on stage
    carrying wood and fire to the gates of the
    Akropolis. The Chorus of Men is an old and
    bedraggled bunch of men who have great difficulty
    with the wood and the great earthen pots of fire
    they carry.

17
Lysistrata
  • The men plan to smoke the women out of the
    Akropolis. The Chorus of Old Women also
    approaches the Akropolis, carrying jugs of water
    to put out the men's fires. The Chorus of Old
    Women is victorious in the contest between the
    choruses and triumphantly pours the jugs of water
    over the heads of the men.

18
Lysistrata
  • The Commissioner, an appointed magistrate, comes
    to the Akropolis seeking funds for the naval
    ships. The Commissioner is surprised to find the
    women at the Akropolis and orders his policemen
    to arrest Lysistrata and the other women. In a
    humorous battle, that involves little physical
    contact, the policemen are scared off.

19
Lysistrata
  • The Commissioner takes the opportunity to tell
    the men of Athens that they have been too
    generous and allowed too much freedom with the
    women of the city. As the policemen run off, the
    Commissioner and Lysistrata are left to argue
    about the Peloponnesian War.

20
Lysistrata
  • Lysistrata argues that the War is a concern for
    women especially and she adds her two cents as to
    how the city should be run, drawing an elaborate
    analogy to show that Athens should be structured
    as a woman would spin wool.

21
Lysistrata
  • Lysistrata tells the Commissioner that war is a
    concern of women because women have sacrificed
    greatly for itwomen have given their husbands
    and their sons to the effort. Lysistrata adds
    that it is now difficult for a woman to find a
    husband. The women mockingly dress the
    Commissioner as a woman.

22
Lysistrata
  • The next day, or perhaps some considerable time
    afterwards, the sex-strike devised at the
    beginning of the text, begins to take effect on
    the men. Lysistrata spots Kinesias, husband of
    Myrrhine, approaching the Akropolis.

23
Lysistrata
  • Kinesias is desperate for his wife. Myrrhine
    refuses to have intercourse with Kinesias until
    peace exists between Athens and Sparta. Kinesias
    tells Myrrhine that her child needs her, he needs
    her and he loves her and Myrrhine pretends to
    listen to his frustrated pleas.

24
Lysistrata
  • Myrrhine hints that she might make love to
    Kinesias, but delays by going repeatedly into the
    Akropolis to fetch things to make the couple
    comfortable. As Kinesias promises to only think
    about a treaty of peace for Athens and Sparta,
    Myrrhine disappears into the Akropolis and leaves
    her husband in great pain.

25
Lysistrata
  • A Spartan Herald approaches the Akropolis. The
    Spartan describes the desperate situation of his
    countrymen and pleads for a treaty. Delegations
    from both states then meet at the Akropolis to
    discuss peace. Lysistrata comes out of the
    Akropolis with her naked handmaid, Peace.

26
Lysistrata
  • While the men are fully distracted by Peace,
    Lysistrata lectures them on the need for
    reconciliation between the states of Greece.
    Lysistrata reasons that because both Athens and
    Sparta are of a common heritage and because they
    have previously helped one another and owe a debt
    to one another, the two sides should not be
    fighting.

27
Lysistrata
  • Using Peace as a map of Greece, the Spartan and
    Athenian leaders decide land rights that will end
    the war. After both sides agree, Lysistrata gives
    the women back to the men and a great celebration
    ensues. The play ends with a song sung in unison
    by the Chorus of Old Men and the Chorus of Old
    Women while everyone dances.
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