Unit 5

   English 201: 
  Masterpieces of Western Literature

 

.Unit 5 Reading

Course Reading

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Introduction Background .Explication Questions Review


Introduction:

Respect: In the world of The Iliad, respect measured power.  In the beginning we heard Kalkhas worry about what would happen to him, if AG perceived disrespect in his analysis of the cause for the plague:
(Iliad) 1.92    A great man in his rage is formidable
                    for underlings: though he may keep it down,
                    he cherishes the burning in his belly
                    until a reckoning day.
Because Kalhas fears AG he treats him with respect. Conversely, why would you respect someone without power?  There are several kinds of power: AK's brute strength, AG's military & political power, OD's proto-scientific power.  In addition, this section features the myth about how Hephaistos caught Aphrodite & Ares in adultery.  Each divinity personifies a different kind of power.  We (Greeks) hope to build a more sophisticated society than the military camp of The Iliad or even than Troy.  This requires various powers.  OD's lectures us about how:
8.174    The gods deal out no gift . . .
            birth, brains, or speech--to every man alike.
Then Alkinoos talks about the rare accomplishments of his society:
8.257    feasting,
            harpers . . . dancing choirs,
            changes of dress, warm baths, & downy beds.
            . . . we excel the world
            in dance & song, as in our ships & running.
One of the points illustrated here is that it is wise to be tolerant & respectful to everyone in the city, because there are so many different talents or powers.  This is not only a tactical consideration (thinking that you never know when a rare talent may save the city), diversity is a positive culture value.  It is unlikely that OD had ever seen anything like the rhythmic gynastics demonstrated by Alkinoos' sons:
8.389    the dance no once could do as well as they--
            handling a purple ball . . . .
            One made it shoot up . . .
            as he leaned backward; bounding high in air
            the other cut its flight far off the ground
            & neither missed a step as the ball soared.
In this section we see OD respectfully soliciting & then following advice given by apparently callow girls: Ino, Nausikaa, the little girl hugging the water jar who turns out to be the awesome in pigtails.  In Antigone, Sophocles has Creon's son tell his father: "It's no city at all, owned by one man alone" (l.824).  In ancient Greece, tolerance of diversity was less a matter of justice (clearly not everyone was inherently worthy of respect in a world where slaves outnumbered free citizens) than an invitation to cosmopolitan splendor.  How do you engineer a city that people of worthy will wish to live in & more than that, be dedicated to?  The sword may be necessary in the beginning, but it becomes a burden & obstacle when it is the sole value.  Near the end of his stay in Phaiakia, OD says:
8.497    All men owe honor to the poets--honor
            & awe, for they are dearest to the Muse
            who puts upon their lips the ways of life.
Not "the single way of life," but the plural.  A city is not a monastery or a military school.  It not only tolerates various ways of life, it celebrates such diversity as desirable.  The symbol for this new sense of civic respect is seen in OD's respect for girls, from whom he has nothing to fear & from whom he cannot expect very much.  How surprising, then, to find that they repeatedly save his life, charm him, & lead him away from the waste of the battlefield into the glittering city.
 

Click on the next section: Background above.