Thursday, September 19, 2019
The Dual Role of Gods in The Iliad Essay -- Iliad essays
The Dual Role of Gods in The Iliad   Ã       Ã  Ã   With even a cursory exposure to  ancient Greek texts, it is obvious that the gods and goddesses are very  important in traditional Greek culture. As literary figures in mythos and  specific poetry and drama, the gods dabble in the life of man, predict his fate,  and routinely thwart any attempt for him to entirely forge his own future. But  for those of us who are not extensively schooled in antiquities, it is hard to  pinpoint exactly what the gods are to the ancient Greeks, and what they are to  us as readers of literature who live outside the culture. Were the gods accepted  as parable figures, meant to instruct? Were they used to explain acts of nature?  Do they now belong to anything outside the scope of literary history?      Ã       Rather than speculate about the role of gods in all of Greek culture, it is  more manageable to look at one specific text and determine the role its gods  play within its world. In The Iliad, the gods are an integral part of the poem.  Their foibles and fickleness recall for the reader the humanness of the Greek  gods, and spark a mental association of men to myths. This makes the long-dead  warriors more real to anyone who reads the poem. But the gods of The Iliad also  inculcate what could be nothing more than a dry account of a historical war that  no one recorded while it was happening. This historical-cultural element, one  that connects the events of that unwritten war to readers by pulling the past  into the present, make the old archetypes oddly modern and applicable to the  present day world and its men. One of the most interesting lines in The Iliad is  when one Aias tells the other that he recognizes Poseidon, who has disguised  himself as K...              ...ormalized remembrance; the gods' inclusion make that  remembrance bigger than any sterile account or battlefield casualty list could  be. This expanded scope makes relevant the deaths of would-be anonymous  warriors, makes tragedy out of widows and orphans, makes us think about the  cycles of human aggression. The gods and their powerful presence is one element  of this relevant piece of historic art.      Ã       Works Cited and Consulted     Camps, W. A. An Introduction to Homer. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980.     Homer. "The Iliad." Western Literature in a World Context: The Ancient World  through the Renaissance. Ed. Paul Davis et al. vol 1. New York: St. Martin's  Press, 1995. 25-156.      Steiner, George, and Fagles, Robert, eds. Homer: A Collection of Critical  Essays. Twentieth Century Views, ed. Maynard Mack. Englewood Cliffs, N. J.:  Prentice Hall, 1962.     Ã                        
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