Peter Jones

Peta, Lysistrata and the comedy of a sex strike

Getty Images 
issue 01 October 2022

The German branch of the ‘green’ organisation Peta (‘People for the ethical treatment of animals’) is demanding that, until men stop eating meat – apparently they cause 41 per cent more pollution than female carnivores – women must deny them sex. The same sanction had its origin, of course, in Aristophanes’s comedy Lysistrata (411 bc), staged during the war between Athens and Sparta (431-404 bc), just after Athens had suffered a disastrous defeat in a failed attempt on Sicily.

Naturally, an organisation like Peta might well think the play was in earnest. Was not Lysistrata proposing a noble, female-instigated sex-strike, by the women of both sides, to stop a war? Had she not organised the women to seize control of their state’s treasuries, ending any chance of military operations? All this surely represented a serious, female liberationist, anti-war agenda.

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