Rayven Hatchett

2%
Flag icon
So Xenophanes is considering not the way that humans in general depict gods, but the way that specifically men do. As I said, his work is fragmentary, and I am not claiming Xenophanes as a radical proto-feminist. But I have found myself coming back to this line and wondering what it might mean if men – and only men – made images of the gods – and goddesses – they worshipped.
Divine Might: Goddesses in Greek Myth
Rate this book
Clear rating