Leo Strauss wrote a
political-
philosophical commentary on the dialogue. He took the
Oeconomicus as a more
ironic examination of the nature of the gentleman,
virtue, and domestic relationships.
Michel Foucault devoted a chapter in his
The History of Sexuality (1976–1984) to "Ischomachus' Household". He took Xenophon's depiction of the relationship between Ischomachus and his wife as a classical expression of the
ancient Greek ideology of
power, according to which a man's control of his
emotions was externally reflected in his control of his wife, his slaves, and his political subordinates. Following Foucault,
feminist scholars and
social historians such as
Sarah Pomeroy have explored the
Oeconomicus as a source for Greek attitudes to the relationship between men and women, but successive interpretations have differed. Some see Xenophon's attitude toward women as
misogynist and
patriarchal, while others maintain that he was a proto-feminist in certain ways. Some have taken Xenophon's use of Ischomachus as a supposed
expert in the education of a wife as an instance of anachronistic irony, a device used by
Plato in his
Socratic dialogues. This ironic line of interpretation sees Ischomachus as a target of
satire rather than a stand-in for Xenophon. Some have suggested that the Ischomachus of the dialogue is the same man whose family became the subject of ridicule in Athenian political oratory. After this Ischomachus died, his widow moved in with her daughter and son-in-law Callias and soon became pregnant with the man's child, which eventually led to the daughter's
suicide attempt. Callias was frequently parodied in Athenian comedies for his
sexual excesses and
pseudo-intellectualism. The import of such irony has also been the subject of much contention: are his wife's actions a sign of a bad education or just the inevitable result of the loss of the controlling influence in her life? How responsible was Ischomachus for his daughter's marriage to a man of such poor
character? ==Gender roles and social change in
Oeconomicus==