Reading Response Prompts

 
These prompts are meant to get you thinking about what you have read and to help focus your thoughts for your reading responses. You can respond to any of them, or, if you have another idea you would rather explore, you are free to write about that instead. Even if you choose to pursue an idea of your own, however, or are not writing a response that day, you should still spend at least a few minutes thinking about each of the prompts in preparation for class. In any case, I suggest doing the reading first, then checking the prompts.  For more information, review the listserv assignment.
 

Homer, Iliad: Books 11-15

A paradox lies at the heart of Iliad. On one hand, the main characters — especially on the Greek side, but a few Trojans like Sarpedon qualify as well — are literally superhuman. They achieve feats of strength, agility, and dexterity that verge on the ridiculous. In comparison to some of their actions, the combat in the Lord of the Rings movies looks stunningly realistic (even when Legolas skateboards a shield down a flight of stairs while shooting arrows at Uruk-hai or single-handedly brings down an oliphant and its crew). The fight hardly seems fair: nearly every Greek spear seems to go through a Trojan’s head or chest or abdomen; many of the Trojan arrows and spears nick a shoulder or elbow, get blocked by a shield, or stick harmlessly in some Greek’s studded belt. Even when the battle does turn the Trojans’ way, Homer does not give us the same level of detail about Hector’s victories. Yet in some ways almost all the great heroes on both sides end up tragic or even pathetic, in the sense of inspiring pathos (emotion). I do not think most of us want to be any of these characters. Why? (It is not enough to say that it is because they die.)

If you have studied Greek mythology, you might have learned that Ares is the god of war. Actually, that is inaccurate. War is too great a part of ancient life to be covered by one god. Ares is more properly thought of as the god of battle and of bloodlust. Pallas Athena is equally associated with war, but she is known more for strategy and skill. Meanwhile, the Greeks embody other attributes of battle in lesser deities such as Eris (Strife) and Ioke (Rout). Consider the gods’ role in the war and their place in the story. Why are both so significant? What do the gods’ characters, behavior, influence, and interference say about Hellenic (Greek) culture and the way the people perceived and understood the world?

The 20th century philosopher and mystic Simone Weil called Iliad “The Poem of Force.” In an essay of that name, she argues, “The true hero, the true subject, the center of the Iliad is force: force employed by man, force that enslaves man, force before which man’s flesh shrinks away. In this work, at all times, the human spirit is shown by its relationship to force, as swept away, blinded by the very force it imagined it could handle, as deformed by the weight of the force it submits to.” Agree or disagree? Why?

 
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