Well... yes and no. Homosexuality was far more to do with power than sexuality. Basically, if you were the ''bottom'' then you were considered to be a woman by society AKA ''the worst thing that a man could possibly be.'' The only way you got respect, the only way you could retain your masculinity, was to be the one doing the penetration.Winter wrote: ↑Sat Jun 04, 2022 7:00 amWhat's funny about the last bit as it retains to this topic is that Hercules is canonically Bisexual (I think he had like 8 boyfriends) but to changing times he was made into a heterosexual exclusive club. Xena, a character made as a spinoff of Hercules was MORE openly Bi then this incarnation of Hercules at a time when that was frowned upon. It's just something I've always found funny, how being gay in Ancient Greece was seen as perfectly normal in contrast to how it was and is viewed today. Really, it's not so much that being queer is seen as normal but rather people are realizing it's always been normal.McAvoy wrote: ↑Sat Jun 04, 2022 6:42 amI cannot speak for the other references you mentioned. But it is the nature of story telling of characters becoming more than they were from what they were in the beginning. The series did make it seem natural as the series went on. Whether it was fanon or the writers intent is up to interviews at this point.Winter wrote: ↑Sat Jun 04, 2022 6:27 amMaybe but the show Certainly leaned into the idea of the two being more then friends. Keep in mind that one of the last scenes Xena and Gabrielle had together was a straight up kiss on the lips. Yes it was intended as Gabrielle just giving Xena the water of life but LOOK AT THIS!!!McAvoy wrote: ↑Sat Jun 04, 2022 6:08 amI think originally they wee just companions and that was that. I think fanon did direct them to the whole 'soul mates' or 'connected souls' thing they did later on. But I don't think Xena and Gabriel were bi or lesbian in the traditional way as we saw it in the series.Madner Kami wrote: ↑Thu Jun 02, 2022 11:15 amI always have issues with accepting that beyond fanon. My perception of that is, that neither character was ever intended to be bisexual/lesbian, but that this is something that came along to rationalize the ever increasing fan-service based off "male gaze". They do write it with romantic overtones lateron, but it absolutely doesn't start out this way.
youtu.be/ojKGyI1TsJw
Look at the way the scene is shot, listen to the music, how Gabrielle rubs her nose against Xena's. This is framed as a romantic kiss between the two leads with the whole Water of Life thing just being a convenient excuse.
Xena and Gabrielle were really the Korrasami of their time in that the show was obviously doing eveyrthing they could to say these two were a couple in every possible way outside of Just Saying It. By today's standards it seems overly subdued but many W|W romances owe a lot to Xena and Gabrielle for pushing and outright breaking ground at the time.
Yesterdays "Overly Overt and Forced" LGBT Romance is today's "To Subtle and Not Brave Enough."
I think male gaze played a part in it but it obviously became something else in the end. There is a reason why Xena overtook Hercules in short order.
One very common thing that happened in Ancient Greece was the ''master and apprentice'' relationship whereby a young boy was taken by an older man to learn the ways of life - and the adult got to have sex with you as payment. Imagine Luke and Obi Wan if Obi Wan was a paedophile.
Or in other words, not only did being ''the bottom'' make you a woman, it also signified that you were an immature boy and not a big strong man.
Homosexuality also got around adultery laws. Having sex with a man wasn't considered to be an affair. Admittedly it was very difficult for a man to get convicted of adultery back in Athens, it normally depended on who your wife's dad or brothers were, but the penalty was to have your balls dipped in hot ash and a very large vegetable such as a radish stuck up your ass. I'm genuinely not making that up. The punishment literally translates into English as ''gaping anus.'' So you can see perhaps why gay sex may have been appealing to the unfaithful man of the day.
TL;DR Ancient Greece wasn't the gay paradise that many today think it was. It was a hotbed of rape, adultery and paedophilia.