Lysistrata
By: July • Essay • 366 Words • November 28, 2009 • 876 Views
Essay title: Lysistrata
answers.
One of the improbabilities of Lysistrata starts in a very first scene. The original plan outlined the women stay home to conduct their sexual boycott of their husbands, but by the end of the prologue, all the Athenian women proceed to the Acropolis where they eventually try so hard to escape from. Also all the cities of Greece were supposed to participate in the strike, but the agreement ends up only between the city of Sparta and Athens. All the women from other cities disappear from the play. This also raises the question why would Lysistrata want to pair up with other cities. In what way could it possibly help her if the war is between Athens and Sparta?
The fact that the women during the time of 411 B.C. could have such enormous power and such strong voice and influence over men is really close to being an impossibility. Women's demands were met, obeyed and actually accomplished the job at hand just by denying sexual favors. Not realistic at all, since there have always been prostitution, there have always been same sex preference. All men whose wife's have denied them their bodies, so unable to control their strong sexual urges, needing to be with their