M2- Discussion 1: How the Greek Gods Reflect Their Society

Here is a brief description of some aspects of the society of the Greek Gods and Goddesses. Perhaps you can recall some Greek myths as well to help you remember how the Greek gods interacted with each other:

  • Artemis was the huntress possessing her quiver and bow. She was goddess of the moon and chastity. She was a staunch defender of her virginity, and those who threatened it met with a fatal end. This happened to Actaeon, who, seeing her bathing, was transformed by Artemis into a stag, and the hounds were loosed on him and tore him to pieces. Orion the hunter, who made the mistake of trying to remove her robe, was killed on the spot. She was equally committed as well to defending her worshippers and priestesses from assault and rape. Artemis was merciless in defending their innocence.
  • Zeus was the supreme god of the pantheon, the sky thunder god whose name means “bright.” Often seen wearing a crown of oak leaves and bearing a giant shield. The youngest son of Cronus and Rhea, he escaped the threat of being eaten by his father, Cronus, like his siblings when Cronus discovered one of his children would overthrow him. Saved by his mother, who hid him in a cave, Zeus was raised by nymphs. A fierce foe to those who opposed him, he could be prideful and irritable. When Prometheus stole fire from the gods and bestowed it to mortals, Zeus chained him to a rock and tormented him endlessly in order to make him reveal the name of the woman who would bear a mortal who would be greater than his father. The woman Thetis was revealed to Zeus to be the mother of this child. She was given to Peleus, and from their union came the hero Achilles.
  • Athena was the goddess of both wisdom and war, known for her beauty, grace, and air of authority. She was always dressed ready for battle with spear and shield. Accompanying her is an owl, the sign of wisdom. Born under miraculous circumstances, she had an adventurous life. In a dispute with Poseidon over who was the patron of the city of Athens, she won the contest with the wise act of planting an olive tree that would bestow the gifts of wood, olive oil, and fruit to the citizens of Athens. When Creops the king saw what she had done, he deemed this the better gift for the people in the long run.
  • Hermes was the messenger, herald, and trickster god who invented speech and had the sole privilege of being able to travel between the realm of the living and the realm of the dead. In this role he bore the souls of the dead in Hades. Of his many exploits, he was known to have killed a tortoise, then stretched seven strings of sheep gut over the shell to honor the Pleiades. He appeased his brother Apollo with the melodious music from the instrument after stealing Apollo’s cattle, bringing reconciliation between the two siblings.
  • Aphrodite was the goddess of love, sexual pleasure, and fertility. She had sexual encounters and romances with a large number of the gods of Olympus, except Zeus and Hades, as well as with the mortals Anchises and Adonis.

Select one of the above gods of goddesses, relate the story of their myth, and compare it to a contemporary myth, story, hero, or heroine from our cultural storehouse. Is there strong resemblance or divergence from the Greek myth? What does this particular story tell you about Greek society as compared to (some facet of) our own?