Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Greek Prophetess-cassandra :: essays research papers
 THE CURSED PROPHETESS    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã¢â¬Å"Oracle, in the Ancient Greek world, was a shrine where people  went to seek advice from prophets or prophetesses (individuals who had  special powers to speak on behalf of a god or foretell the future). Besides  referring to an altar, the word oracle also refers to the prophet or  prophetess, and to his/her prophecyâ⬠ (Cassandra). The Ancient Greeks  wholly believed in these sacred persons. When disease would corrupt a  city, the people would go to the shrines to ask a prophet to speak on behalf   of the gods. Once the Greeks knew the cause of the plague, they would do  everything in their immortal power to convince the gods to relieve them  from their suffereing. In the same way as Oedipus, the king of Thebes,   asked Tiresias (a prophet) to speak for the gods explaining why his people  were suffering, in Oedipus Rex. The Ancient Greeks believed their fate  lay in the powers and oracle of the prophets and prophetesses. There was  one prophetess, however, that was an exception to this belief. Although  Cassandra was the most beautiful and intelligent prophetess, in Greek  mythology, her prophecies were never believed.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Stories of gods falling in love with or lusting after young beautiful  women appear everywhere in Greek mythology, and the case of Cassandra  is no exception. Greek gods chose their prey because of some  distinguished characteristic or part of their geneology. Cassandra was a  lovely young woman, and described by Homer as the most beautiful of  Priamââ¬â¢s daughters. Apollo, similarly, was the most handsome of the  young gods. Cassandra describes Apollo as someone who ââ¬Å"struggled to  win me, breathing ardent for meâ⬠ (Lefkowitz 15).  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Cassandra, daughter of Queen Hecuba and King Priam of Troy,  was a beautiful young woman blessed with the gift of prophecy by the god  Apollo. In return, she was supposed to love him, but at the last minute she  shunned Apollo. As an act of revenge, Apollo added a twist to her gift:  Cassandra was doomed to tell the truth, but never to be believed (Cohen  50).   à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Cassandra has always been misunderstood and misinterpreted as a  madwoman or crazy doomsday prophetess. She has always been shown  in paintings with her long hair flying around her shoulders in what was  considered lunatic fashion, scantily clad, and helpless on her knees in the  face of her predicted doom. However, there is so much more to  Cassandra than her maddened predictions and pitiable treatment.   Cassandra was a great, intelligent heroine who was cursed by the gods for  not playing by their rules. She is a tragic figure, not a madwoman    					    
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