The cultural influence on the variants of the myth of Deianeira

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2014
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en_US
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Abstract
Greek myths are particularly susceptible to influence from the teller’s culture and their details often change to address issues from contemporary society. The myth of Deianeira, though often neglected due to greater interest in her more transgressive tragic peers, provides fascinating insight into the conflict surrounding the appropriate wife and the ideal marriage. The two most illustrious treatments of her myth are the Trachiniae, written by Sophocles and the Heroides 9, written by Ovid. Sophocles focuses on Deianeira’s struggle to remain a proper wife after Heracles has brought home the foreign mistress Iole. This choice may have influenced by the Periclean funeral speech that advocated silence as women’s glory and the citizenship laws that prevented children from non-citizen wives to inherit. Ovid on the other hand used Deianeira as a mouthpiece to denounce Hercules’s willful submission to his foreign mistresses and shameful crossdressing. His criticism comes alongside Roman anxieties about effeminacy and the Julian laws that penalized the childless and rewarded citizens with large families. This thesis will track the ways in which contemporary culture changed the way the myth of Deianeira was written.
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