ares slays his daughter’s rapist
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ares slays his daughter’s rapist
Illustration from The Flying Islands of the Night by Franklin Booth (1913)
Another reminder that Greek mythology is always somehow symbolic, metaphorical, allegorical, since we are dealing with anthropomorphic personifications and other embodiments of cosmic powers.
For example: Demeter has sex with both Zeus and Poseidon. Something-something about the relationship of the Earth with the Sky and the Sea (or the celestial and chthonian powers). ESPECIALLY since these relationships are said to happen at the beginning of the world, in the primordial times during which the world settled itself for what it is now.
Herakles' wedding with Hebe, the personification of youth, checks in with when he becomes an immortal god (aka, an eternally young entity). What better way to symbolize a hero escaping the clutches of death than by him becoming the husband of the spirit of eternal youth?
Why is Hestia never leaving Olympus? Something-something about her being the literal personification of the hearth, which is at the center of the house/community and does not move.
Why is Ares getting his ass kicked by Athena? Because Athena is civilization, and Ares savagery, and in the Ancient Greek mindset intelligence, wisdom and craft will always be above brutality, bloodlust and random cruelty.
Do I need to spell it out that the myth of Persephone-Hades-Demeter is about the cycle of the seasons, and how the earth renews itself and brings back life after a time of death?
And I wonder why Ares' companions during his mass-slaughters are called Phobos, Deimos and Eris - Fear, Panic and Discord... Why would the goddess that breaks harmony and sows feuds and chaos be depicted as the close sister of the god of the ravages of war and of the brutality of conflicts, what a strange mystery!
And I can go on, and on, and on. Remember, the Greek gods aren't just super-heroes or wizards (that's more in line with more "humanized" mythologies, like the Irish or Nordic ones). They are embodiments of concepts and ideas, personifications of natural forces and cosmic powers, they are living allegories and fleshed metaphors. Zeus wields the lightning because he IS the lightning and thunder. Dionysos is both the bringer of joy and madness because he IS alcohol. Hades is both the name of the god of the dead, and of the realm of the dead. Hestia's name is literaly "hearth" in Greek, Hebe "youth", Nyx "night", Gaia "earth", Eros "desire". You can write "Eris met Helios at Okeanos' palace" or you can write "Strife encountered the Sun at the palace of Ocean" and that is the EXACT SAME THING!
[Mind you to limit the gods to being JUST allegories is also a mistake not to make. Greek deities are much more than just X concept or X idea... But one part of the myths will always be, down the line, some weather metaphor or some natural cycle motif]
Zeus was more than just lightning and thunder. He was basically the embodiment of chaos. The vast majority of the Greek myths all have Zeus as the cause for why stuff is happening. Zeus was mad/upset with someone (the birth of the minotaur, Zeus was mad at King Minos and caused his queen to become absolutely obsessed with a bull, the queen had sex with the bull and gave birth to the minotaur) or Zeus was horny and had sex with someone (like half the heros of Greek myths are demigod sons of Zeus). A good one third to half of the myths combine the two.
I am sorry to tell you that you are wrong. As in: you are literaly doing a counter-interpretation, based on wrong facts.
The "wrong fact" being: the god you are thinking of, involved in the Minotaur business, is Poseidon, not Zeus. That's the one who got mad with the bull business - though there is a variation of the legend where it is Aphrodite who caused the Minotaur's existence.
And then, Zeus is literaly not the embodiment of chaos. As in: he was the god of order for Ancient Greeks. As their main and supreme god, the Ancient Greeks considered Zeus the source, patron and protector of their laws, customs and civilization, aka order. Zeus was the main god of justice - seconded by Athena. He was seen as the one who ultimately would reward people for their good deeds and punish criminals (see myths such as the one of Lycaon). He was not just the god of justice - he was also literaly the one who acted as a judge among the other gods. Whenever gods had a feud or a quarrel, it was up to him to settle the matter and decide upon the cases.
He was literaly a god of fate and cosmic balance in Homer's Iliad - literaly because he actually weighed down the individual fates of people with a scale to see what he had to do with them. In fact there is an entire part of the Iliad dedicated to how Zeus is forced to see his son die before his eyes, because he said no gods could interfere in the war and he is bound by his own word, as the embodiment of the law.
Yes, he was known as a lustful god who slept around a LOT. But I actually talked about this before - and it is something most scholars on Greek mythology pointed out... Zeus' title was "Father of Gods and Men" and this was literal. Ancient Greeks had this concept of the father = king (after all they were a VERY very patriarchal society), and as such Zeus had to be depicted as the literal father of all the main gods of the Greek religion, but also as the ancestor of not just the various ethnicities of humans, but also the progenitor of all the great kings and city-founders that literaly built humanity/Greek civilization. To crudely say it, by sleeping around Zeus literaly created the world, and while on a first-degree it makes him look like a horny womanizer, on the deeper, religious and mythical levels, it is just him being the literal "father of the universe". Take a close look at who his children are - and most of the time they will be great heroes who fought off monsters and helped build civilization (like Herakles). Aka, forces of order.
In fact, I guess you are confusing Zeus with Poseidon - who was one of the actual powers of chaos among the Olympians. Constantly quarreling with the other gods for the ownership of cities and lands, for example, or acting as an antagonist in most famous stories (such as The Odyssey). In fact, scholars have pointed out the neat parallel between Zeus and Poseidon: both sleep around, both have a lot of kids everywhere, but whereas Zeus' children are mostly legendary kings and great heroes, Poseidon tends to produce monsters or vicious criminals.
So Zeus IS order, just like Apollo or Athena. If there's a chaos god, it will be either Poseidon or Ares, or even Dionysos.
Perfect, no notes!
OP hit a grand slam with this one. I just want to point out some observations on why people seem to have a hard time understanding the themes of Greek mythology that I have personally encountered:
1) Greek words: As OP mentioned, a lot of times ancient mythology was an allegory and some names of the Greek gods are the literal personification of those concepts. Zeus isn't always kind because lightning isn't always kind. He can seem ruthless because lightning can be ruthless. In the Prometheus myth he is the one who decides if humans have fire or not because lightning causes fires and Zeus was probably believed to have given the first humans fire.
2) Local myths that have been re-organized: Sometimes the confusion stems from the fact that different city states and towns in the ancient world had their own local government running it and so myths varied from polis to polis like the death of Adonis being caused by Ares, Artemis or Apollo depending on the location or Hercules being an Olympian depending on the location. A lot of these locations also had tourism and depended on tourism as a valid source of income so they depended on their myth being different enough and hero focused to bring in tourists or people on a religious pilgrimage. Unfortunately as the Hellenistic and Roman periods had empires that blended all those cultures together but selected the favorite version among all of them (often Athenians but not always) I find that modern people have a hard time wrapping their heads around the concept that myths are wobbly, but I agree with OP that Zeus represents order in most ancient cultures that worshipped the Greek gods.
3) Evolution of the Gods: I also find that people have a hard time with the myths because they are older than writing, were originally oral (anyone who has ever played the game Telephone will get that variety will happen over time) and may have started in the Mycenaean period or even older but changed over time. For example in the Iliad Zeus mentions his war with Poseidon and that's because in the Mycenaean religion Poseidon was the original king of the gods, not Zeus. Artemis and Apollo were not twins and Artemis and Dionysus were originally the children of Demeter, this is why they both have ties to the wilderness and mother nature because they were originally rustic gods like Pan. So I find people often mix the gods and myths because they have changed over time.
4) Ancient culture vs Modern progress: The biggest misunderstanding is the ethnocentric way modern people view the ancient world. In anthropology ethnocentricity is the act of judging a culture based on your own culture's standards which ruins the understanding. Anthropologists try to judge the cultures based on the culture's own rules and standards to better understand why they do what they do. In the ancient world women were seen as property and didn't have the same rights modern women have. Kings were also oftentimes seen as directly connected to the gods and thus given "Divine birth" to rule. People see Zeus cheating and judge it based on today's standards whereas the ancient world saw it as a connection to Zeus and Zeus granting this king the right to lead because either he's a direct descendant or an ancestor was and praised their mother's beauty in the process because beauty was very important to the ancient Greeks and if a person was so beautiful to drive a god to procreate with them, then it was seen as high praise. So if they're being praised, why is it described as "rape?" That's because of the purity culture of the ancient world which discouraged women from seeming willing in order to give them a modest appearance. We don't know the true feelings of the women because they were not the main topic of the myth, their children were. Also, even if they seemed like they were consenting like the myth of Semele who is excited about being with Zeus but gets tricked by Hera, they couldn't be seen as actually consenting because they were viewed as property and thus the consent needed to come from their husband or father and most of the time the gods bypassed that consent. Any sexual act towards a woman by a god was seen as a violation of her father or husband but never her because she never had a say in her own life. They were captured by the god and the old word for captured would often be translated as raped. In the modern world this is thankfully different with sexual liberation helping women untangle from purity culture but the ancient world had its own rules and in order to better understand the myths, one must understand the ancient culture, rules and laws or else big misunderstandings will happen. For example, often times when humans in ancient history were seen as very exceptional, beautiful or brilliant to the point of seeming inhuman it was believed they were the secret love child of a god. This can be observed with Alexander the Great who was often seen as being the son of Zeus. Sidenote: Consent of a woman also didn't matter to the ancient Greeks because marriage was seen as a political union. This is also why Aphrodite is seen more as a type of madness that opposes Zeus/order instead of love in the way we understand it today. Love was not the priority in marriages and Aphrodite was seen more as a goddess of lust and then later Greeks and Romans started to explore her more and look at love differently but in the ancient oral myth world she was definitely seen as a menace that ruined arranged marriages and thus got in the way of order.
5) Allegories vs local legends and tragedy: As OP stated, the gods were a way for the ancient Greeks to understand the world around them. These myths were Mnemonics (named after Mnemosyne: goddess of memory) to tell the story of how something came to be or to remember when to water the crops or remember when the seasons change, etc. There is a myth of Orion lusting after and chasing the Pleiades because he's literally following them in the sky. The ancient Greeks were also comforted with the thought that if a person died young it probably meant they were loved by a god and taken. Local legends like the Spartan Prince Hyacinth who was said to have been tragically loved by Apollo, were said to have been chosen by the gods and so we have the "brides of Hades." These were young girls of marriageable age dying and being buried in their wedding dress and said to be marrying Hades. So there is a lot happening allegorically but when modern people encounter an ancient myth without the historical context they judge them in the same way they would judge full humans and forget the allegory.
6) Missing myths and cultural references: There are so many vases that reference mythos that were either never written or have yet to be found but well known or specific to their region. There are also a lot of ancient tragedies and comedies we have references to that have yet to be found or are incomplete or were purposefully disposed of like some of Sappho's work. Even if you know the information, you can't judge a culture based on small samples and echoes of preserved fragments. We are missing so many cultural, religious and historical references that it's hard to make a confident assessment on so much that is missing, but we try and might still get it wrong so some people who have done research might be using older resources that are now invalid due to new discoveries or old biases from researchers that are now contested, this is especially prevalent with 19th and 20th century research of the ancient world. So it's important to keep in mind that we might be getting information about the gods that might be outdated or littered in 19th/20th century biases which tended to see the gods in a more negative and human light.
Conclusion: The ancient myths are fascinating and fun but it's important to remember they are older than the Bible with concepts we have lost the meaning of due to various reasons but even in their own context the stories follow the pattern OP listed. I graduated studying this and will be going to a Master's program to study the archaeology of it, and I can tell you they are way more fascinating in their original culture and context than ethnocentric modern interpretation.
Can we please start wholesome rumors about the gods based on our own experiences? I need "pass it on" posts.
I'll go first:
Ares likes hugs, pass it on!
Apollo and Artemis have a weirdly similar taste in music, evidenced by:
Artemis
Apollo
And on my limited experience with Ares so far, he's a great mentor when learning to control anger issues and when to use your anger, but he's also a very good listener and is just generally content when someone wants to work with him, kinda "flaterred". Dunno, that's the vibes I got so far I lack words in English to explain
Also, Artemis and Ares will be your best friends in every Hades (game) run. They're also a deadly duo too.
Can't wait until I get to Apollo on Hades II, he's gonna be insufferable :) I love him
the level of censorship around this man is ridiculous, what happened to free speech? It’s just his name.
This is so wild. The ruling class is scared af. The way they absolutely do not want him to become the folk hero he is becoming, and are doing everything they can to stop it.
I'll reblog this here, but I was just discussing with my mom (we're not from North America) how freaking WILD this is.
I explained it to her by comparing what's happening here with The Hunger Games. Killing Luigi or a normal FAIR trial isn't enough, they have to kill the image, the symbol he became. Sort of like President Snow had to do with Katniss to stop a riot - and we all know how that went.
They are scared because they have to show to the masses they are stronger - when they aren't. People won't come together if they haven't a common goal or a "leader" figure, and now they do. That's the whole point of The Hunger Games and it's amazing how they are doing exactly the thing that will only make his image stronger (and hey, I only watched the movies, I was working like a farm horse back then and haven't had the time to read, unfortunately)
I'm not here romanticizing him as a hero or as a villain. Real life is much more nuanced. I'm just sharing my two cents of how I see it as a lawyer and after seeing many many despicable people going to normal trials for crimes far more disgusting and horrid than this one.
I'm also someone who has been sick for 5 years and can't get my insurance to cover for a single thing I need and it has been really affecting my family's life, financially.
I'm pretty happy to see these guys scared as fuck and I hope this flame doesn't die fast. For real. That's my position, even if I can analyze things in a more neutral stance.
photos of palestinian artist duniyana al-amour's room, where she was killed by israeli strike at the age of 22.
adnan, father of duniyana al-amour (2000-2022), sits among her drawings in her damaged room which was hit by an israeli strike, east of khan yunis, in the southern gaza strip, monday, august 10, 2022. al-amour's drawings in her damaged room after shrapnel tore through her bedroom during Israel's surprise opening salvo, hours before militants fired any rockets.
“i am not making anything amazing. i am merely trying, amidst this isolation, to make life bearable.” - al-amour on her work
[Averyll in the Knight of Cups for @bunnidarling ]
Every day is a living nightmare filled with fear and uncertainty that doesn't end when we wake. The horrors of displacement, violence, and unimaginable suffering have become our daily reality, and we live in constant fear that each day could be our last, Don't hesitate to help
Donate if you can and share widely please
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Hi, my name is Eman Abdel Rahman, I am a 25 years old from Sudan. My family are curr… Eman Abdelrahman needs your support for Our home bomba
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Hey guys. I've been talking to Eman and following her fundraiser for a while. I've seen it really stagnate after passing the halfway mark. She still needs help. Her family still need help. And with your help they can evacuate and try to build anew while waiting for the situation in Sudan to improve.
Hey guys, I got news that this fundraiser has become EXTREMELY urgent as the RSF is approaching Eman's location. We can still help. Share this fundraiser with everyone in your life so we can save hers.
New York City ballet production of Midsummer Nights Dream
The fact this isn't a painting is a testament to one of the greatest feats of set design and production I've ever seen.
My god just look at this! The lighting, set design, photography... I've just never seen anything like it.
I think this is the first time I've ever been wowed by "this ISN'T a painting"!
Ok. Took me a while, but I updated my Redbubble shop with Frau Schneider stickers (mostly because I have a serious lack of confidence to do so rather than anything else)
So, if anyone is interested, you can now have Frau Schneider sternly staring at you anywhere you want to stick her. Link to the shop page is here.
Also, I if you don't like Redbubble and you want to print it somewhere else by yourself, you can find the link for the transparent file here (dunno if the quality is good, feel free to DM and ask me) - I just ask that you leave me any tip on my Ko-Fi as thanks for my unhinged efforts!
Feel free to throw this at the man himself too if you wanna, I'm not in Europe to do so myself
That's it, thank you and hope you all have fun with stickers of Frau, our beloved 🖤🖤
LEGENDS OF THE QUENDI
Private commission, from The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien.
Pen and ink, watercolor, 24 K gold.
Gandalf/Olorin, Cirdan, Celembribor, Gil Galad, Melian, Galadriel, Elrond, Arwen, The Elven Rings, The Elessar, and a symbolic Belt of Melian.
No, I'm not playing hooky on Good Omens, I get about 20 minutes a day to work on other stuff.
I was getting a half hour a day, but even that's too much at this point.
And yes, at roughly 25 minutes a day, a piece like this takes a really long time. Months.
I'm a big believer in making sure you pick at something else even while working on a big project, even if you only use that time for warm ups. Keeps you from crumbling under the weight of the main project.
The humans in Greek Mythology are the mega rich and powerful:
In my college classes people are often shocked when I tell them my favorite part of Greek mythology is the gods themselves and I'm not a big fan of the humans.
99% of my classmates prefer the humans in mythos, especially the ones that stick it to the gods like Sisyphus and feel bad for humans like Kassandra and Helen who have been wronged by the gods because "they're just like us." My classmates and teachers hate the gods and don't understand why anyone in modern times would want to worship such violent and selfish beings whenever I point out there are still people who worship them. They hold onto the idea that people in mythology embody the human experience of being oppressed by terrible gods and fate and we should feel bad for them because "they're human just like us" but they forget that the people in Greek Mythology are NOT just like us. They are more relatable to medieval royalty, colonizers and ultra rich politicians who make laws and decisions on wars and the fates of others, especially the poor and the very vulnerable.
Every hero or important human in Greek Mythology is either some form of royalty or mega rich politician/priest-priestess (of course this is with the exception of people who are explicitly stated to be poor like the old married couple in the myth where Zeus and Hermes pretend to be panhandlers). All of them have an ancient Greek lifestyle more relatable to Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump, and especially to British royalty during the British empire, than the average person.
All of them.
Odysseus, Patroclus, Theseus, Helen of Troy, Kassandra, Diomedes, Agamemnon, Perseus, Hercules, Aeneas, Paris, Any human who has a divine parent or is related to one, etc. Although sometimes the story omits it, it is heavily implied that these are people who own hundreds or even thousands of slaves, very poor farmers and the tiny barely there working class as royal subjects.
They are the ones who make laws and whose decisions massively affect the fates of so many people. So no, they can't just be forgiven for some little whim, because that little whim affects the literal lives of everyone under their rule. By being spoiled they've just risked the lives of thousands of people and possibly even gotten them killed like when Odysseus' audacity got every single slave and soldier in his ships killed or when Patroclus as a kid got upset and killed another kid for beating him at a game. (A normal person wouldn't kill another person just for winning a game but royalty and those who think they're above the law do it all the time, plus the class status of the child wasn't mentioned but the way he didn't think he'd get in trouble implies the kid was of lower class, possibly the child of a slave or a foreign merchant.)
The gods get a bad reputation for punishing the humans in mythology but, if not them, who else is going to keep them accountable when they are the law?
And whose to say the humans beneath them weren't praying to the gods in order to keep their masters in check?
Apollo is the god of slavery, Zeus is the god of refugees, immigrants and homeless people, Ares is the protector of women, Artemis protects children, Aphrodite is the goddess of the LGBT community, Hephaestus takes care of the disabled, etc. It wouldn't be surprising if the gods are punishing the ultra rich and powerful in these myths because the humans under their rulership prayed and sent them as they did historically.
Every time someone asks me if I feel bad for a human character in a myth, I think about the many lives affected by the decision that one human character made and if I'm being completely honest, I too would pray to the gods and ask them to please punish them so they can make more careful decisions in the future because:
They are not just like us.
We are the farmers, a lot of our ancestors were slaves, we are the vulnerable being eaten by capitalism and destroyed by the violence colonialism created. We are the poor subjects that can only pray and hope the gods will come and correct whatever selfish behavior the royal house and mega rich politicians are doing above us.
And that's why I pray to the gods, because in modern times I'm dealing with modern Agamemnons who would kill whatever family members they have to in order to reach their end goal, I'm dealing with everyday modern Achilles who would rather see their own side die because they couldn't keep their favorite toy and would gladly watch their subjects die if it means they eventually get their way. The ones that let capitalism eat their country and it's citizens alive so long as it makes them more money. These are our modern "demigods," politicians who swear they are so close to God that they know what he wants and so they pass laws that benefit only them and claim these laws are ordained by God due to their close connection just like how Achilles can speak to the gods because of his demigod status via his mother.
Look at the news, these are humans that would be mythical characters getting punished by Greek gods which is why anything Greco-Roman is jealousy guarded by the rich and powerful and is inaccessible to modern worshippers because Ivy League schools like Harvard and Cambridge make sure to keep it that way. That's what we're dealing with. These are the humans these mythical beings would be because:
In our modern times the humans in mythos would be the politicians and mega rich that are currently ruining our society and trying to turn it into a world where only the rich can manipulate wars and laws, just like they do in mythology.
Fuck them.
I literally have so much more to add about my disdain for them and I didn't even touch on the obvious ancient Greek propaganda.
Now that things like Artshield exist, I feel more comfortable posting art again *cries in a corner*
"forgive me mother for I have sinned" - because Vergil doesn't need to ask Sparda for forgiveness. He has to ask it to his human heart he always belittled so much. He has to ask it to Eva.
Tried something more ~graphic~ and not really anatomically correct with how the blood flowed down his face - had a totally different idea to use more graphic colours and make it very divided between teal and red, but, alas, I cannot work with graphic styles... Yet.
Alsoooo tumblr already turns down the image quality and, as I mentioned above, I did use Artshield to protect it from AI (because fuck you AI bros and tumblr for scraping our stuff without consent) - I'm still learning how to use it and how to make the output quality better but, honestly, just being able to post without worrying endlessly my art might be stolen by those lazy degenerates is good enough for now.
And finally, I'm gonna add this one as a sticker on my Redbubble shop to replace Vergil's old design - you can support a human artist and find my shop in this link!
oh humans, we are always struggling, aren't we?
Ppl: “Glaze and nightshade all your art!!”
Also ppl: * does not mention that you need to have a fucking NVIDIA GPU and running nightshade on one image takes at best 20 minutes*
Like the online version of glaze/nightshade requires an account. And last time i checked they arent accepting new accounts because of the high pressure.
Like i make my art on my ipad. My MacBook is from 2014. If i tried to download and run nightshade on my decade old macbook and go throufg 10+ years of artworks i might as well just set it on fire.
Like majority of digital artists doesnt actually have a high end gaming pc setup. It is unrealistic to expect everyone to be able to run such a heavy program just so we can feel somewhat ok with sharing our drawings online. It’s ridiculous. I CAN NOT nightshade or glaze my artworks even if i wanted to.
I have a pretty decent gaming PC, and despite this I had to close ALL the running programs I had running in the background (aka Discord and Opera) to let it shade my art, and the result was honestly quite awful even on the lowest setting.
I have already shared it around, but if you can't run it try Artshield.
It will add a big watermark all over your piece (there's also a check button to be sure it worked). It works best on pieces with a colored background, with white backgrounds or B/W piece it won't always work, but it's worth trying it.
Also, post at the lowest resolution possible (I go with 72dpi, keeping the highest one for clients and Ko-Fi rewards only), maybe add a noise effect too. I always did it but I read a while ago it makes a bit difficult for the A/I to scrape the piece. Not sure if it's still true, but still, worth a shot.
Glaze and Nightshade are great tool, but they're sadly unusable for a lot of people, and I hope they'll find a solution.
Hey I made a post of available options to people who don't have a powerful tech + tips to make glazing/shading not as ugly :]
The Awakening of Psyche by Guillaume Seignac (1904)
hey can you do me a favour?? Can you go get that nice pristine sketchbook or journal you've been hoarding and put some kind of mark on the first page? Anything will do, like a smudge of graphite or a blob of ink, or perhaps a very scribbly dinosaur. Just put something there. Please, or the dinosaur will be sad.
I was SO SAD for this dinosaur that I grabbed the nearest notebook (a calendar) and drew a little sailing ship for him
oh thank goodness!
I found him! Here is the dinosaur that will be sad if you don't use your new sketchbook!
I've found that if it's still really hard to do this, marking the last page instead of the first helps.
Reclining Nude by Luis Ricardo Falero (1879)