Abstract

Women have long been considered marginal in rural Greek society. In the mythic realm of Greek heroic song, however, women are empowered over the life-cycle of the wandering male hero. Through their connections with the natural world, their management of all rites of passage, and their timely verbal expressions of pónos in ritual laments, women control the hero's seasonality and have the power to bring his life full circle. The hero spends his youth as a wandering kseniteménos whose life is external and sterile, occupied with the exclusively male pónos of trials of manhood. Once the hero returns home, he is near death and begins the task of reintegrating into the world of women; it is through their voices that his heroic glory is made immortal.

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