Plato's Symposium, By Aristophanes

Words: 852
Pages: 4

Western society sees itself as an inheritor of the Classicism in Greece and the Roman Empire. We see this in the corinthian columns on the steps that lead into the courthouse, in the stems of the words we use to label our plants, in the theater plays we go watch and in what we pride ourselves with. Demos means people, kratos is power. Democracy is power to the people.
In Plato’s Symposium there is described a myth of love, gender and soulmates. Aristophanes tells a story of the primordial human. It has two heads, two hearts, four legs and four arms and there are three genders: the all male, the all female and the androgyne. Then Zeus gets mad at the abnormal humans who are extremely powerful and splits them in two, leaving them in eternal
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In the 21st century, Aristophanes’ myth might very well be a gender spectrum or a questioning of the relation between gender and sex. In the 21st century Aristophanes uses the family restroom because it seems the only right thing to do when gender isn’t real. Even so our society depends on it and we need to assign it to people for them to function in society. But what if the gender expectations we enforce on a person don't match who they are, what they feel like and how they want to …show more content…
Lawmakers try to find a compromise between the wellbeing of the transgender people and the intense binary of society that is almost impossible to overcome. The transgender bathroom issue gained momentum because of legislation in North Carolina. It is a very difficult subject because beyond actual real life issue, the problem stems from people who don't understand what being transgender is, they are afraid of it and dismiss it as a grab for attention or a mental disease or whatever they find more comforting than a change in social perceptions