Rhetoric
Getting some practice in, huh?
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Guile said:Something I should have asked before choosing B)...
How did the Greeks see tanners/renderers? I know in some societies it was seen as unclean, or was it more like an artisan thing, respected like the rest of the merchant class?
Tanning was a dirty and smelly job, but one that was not disreputable. It was a job of normal status for a craftsman, though an opponent or uncouth person might make reference to it as a way of insulting a politically active tanner.
Gnarker said:I'd vote E, but I have a few questions first regarding that option:
- What is our starting age? Young enough to finish an education by the time we're adult, if we get the opportunity?
- What is our home situation like? What are our guardians attitudes to women's rights? Could we wrangle an education from them if really tried?
If we go with E, we should propably get contacts with the priesthood of Athene. She is the cities' patron deity, so represents a lot of pull. She is the goddess of wisdom, and she is female, so that's a decent basis for an argument for women's rights and education.
As a young woman of a well born house, it would be most interesting to start you off just as you become old enough for your father to seriously consider marrying off. You would be 15 or so. Before that you would be learning the skills required of an aristocrat's daughter (tending children, weaving, spinning, cooking, and other domestic tasks) and would have little ability to argue on your own behalf.
Not that your father or other male relatives would take you seriously; as Athenian society is very sexist, the commonly held belief was that women were irrational and childlike. All men of Athens, even the lowest slaves, believe that they have superior powers of reasoning compared to a woman, and that it is the role of men to guide and protect good Athenian women from foolishly harming their own interests. Your father is no different. Indeed, he has a vested interest in maintaining the status quo as he is quite rich, and a daughter of marrying age represents a potential bargaining chip to weld his family to another of equal or greater status.
Could a girl in such a situation convince her father she should be educated? It is unlikely. Getting an education wouldn't be impossible though, but simply very hard for a girl in that situation.
The priests of Athena would most likely treat the daughter of a high born house who came to them arguing that women in Athens should be treated as equals with gentle reproach, and would tell your father to keep a better eye on you. I say "most likely" because I do not know the future. It may be that you make a superlative argument, or find a particularly open-minded priest.
Still I ask you make no mistake, when I said that options E and F were hard and impossible respectively, I was not joking. It would be a dangerous uphill battle for you to do the things you have in mind.
Edit: Having done a count, I see that the votes are very close. B, C, and E are all quite popular.
Voting is still not closed, I wish to give those who requested extra information time to reflect on it.