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Does anyone know any good sources to fin out what the fleece metaphor stands for in Lysistrata?

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  1. the following are thelinks and sites which will show what the fleece metaphor represents in Lysistrata of Aristophanes :

    The Eleven Comedies by Aristophanes et al[306] A metaphor referring to the abundant vintages that peace would assure. .... The women of Athens, led by Lysistrata and supported by female delegates ...

    www.scribd.com/doc/889983/The-Eleven-C... - 575k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

    Lysistrata's ClewThat theme is introduced in the lines preceding our passage, where Lysistrata takes up the woolworking metaphor (567-70): she will resolve quarrels abroad ...

    www.apaclassics.org/AnnualMeeting/04mt... - 5k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

    [PDF] Lysistrata TGFile Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML

    The Commissioner ridicules Lysistrata’s choice of metaphor, but Lysistrata ... Does the wool advise? LYSISTRATA. Consider the City as fleece, recently ...

    us.penguingroup.com/static/pdf/teacher... - Similar pages - Note this

    The Perennial Satirist: Essays in Honour of Bernfriend Nugel - Google Books Resultby Peter Edgerly Firchow, Bernfried Nugel ... - 2005 - Literary Collections - 400 pages

    The Magistrate is utterly scornful of Lysistrata's homely metaphor, but she comes ... among Greeks should be like creating a warm cloak from a raw fleece. ...

    books.google.com/books?isbn=3825883396...

    Lysistrata, after all, is a play about peace of a practical sort. The fetching figure of Diallage herself, revealed at the end of the play, represents peace as a contractual agreement; as Diallage takes the adversaries in hand, Lysistrata negotiates the covenants between Athens and her enemies(1090-1187). That theme is introduced in the lines preceding our passage, where Lysistrata takes up the woolworking metaphor (567-70): she will resolve quarrels abroad like teasing apart a tangled skein. Then she applies that model to troubles at home: there must be a purge of partisans, balanced by citizen rights for metics and others. Draw these together "making one big bobbin" or clew (tolupe) from which to weave a "cloak for the people." (586).

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