Achilles’ Character as an Internal Critique of Warmongering Ideals in the Iliad
Achilles’ Character as an Internal Critique of Warmongering Ideals in the Iliad
Author(s): Marina MarrenSubject(s): Psychology, Greek Literature, Theory of Literature, Sociology of Literature
Published by: Новосибирский государственный университет
Keywords: Anger; egotistical self-love; psychology; solipsism; shame;
Summary/Abstract: In this paper, I show how Achilles’ faults work as a lens through which we more readily see the problematic nature of ideals that cast war – and especially an aggressive war of conquest – in a poeticized and desirable light. I argue that in Homer’s Iliad, idealized images of war, which promise super-human glory, in the end, serve to undo and waste human life. I do not mean to say that in this archetypal war epic we find an outright critique of war. However, I argue that the Iliad holds its poeticized images of war in tension with the gruesome, life-negating violence to which these idealized representations give way.
Journal: ΣΧΟΛΗ. Философское антиковедение и классическая традиция
- Issue Year: XVII/2023
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 550-565
- Page Count: 16
- Language: English