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05 Achilles and Hector: Homeric Hero
 
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05 Achilles and Hector: Homeric Hero [Paperback]

Seth Benardete (Author)
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Book Description

1587310015 978-1587310010 July 20, 2005 1
Seth Benardete's study of the Iliad, which initiated his scholarly career, bears the hallmarks of the unique turn of mind that characterized all his later work. In a brief Note written thirty years later, included in this volume, he looks back on what he sees as the limits of his original reading of the Iliad. Yet he seems to have been aware of the fundamental problems from early on that he wrestled with explicitly when he returned to Homer some forty years later: the question of the relations among gods, fate, and human choice, which lies at the core of his late "Platonic reading" of the Odyssey, is already guiding his understanding of the Iliad. And he saw, in working out that understanding, how those relations take on a very distinct form for the tragic hero in contrast with the comic hero – Achilles in contrast with Odysseus.

Achilles and Hector: The Homeric Hero is divided into two parts, "Style" and "Plot." In the first, Benardete examines the formulae Homer inherited from the poetic tradition, but only to demonstrate how Homer put them to work for deliberate purposes: in his search for those purposes, Benardete leads us to see how the supposedly conventional epithets and similes in fact open up key themes of the Iliad, including the crucial differences between men and heroes, Achaeans and Trojans, lineage and individual virtue. If the epithets were properly understood, Benardete suggests, however hesitantly, the plot of the Iliad would necessarily follow.

Turning to the plot, Benardete brings to light a pattern marked by three stages, in the course of which the motives of the Trojan War are transformed. While the war begins as a struggle for justice and vengeance, provoked by Helen, she unleashes something that goes beyond her – the love of fame or glory, in which heroic ambition finds its natural expression. A third stage is ushered in with Achilles’ choice to return to the war in order to avenge the death of Patroclus; this final development brings the motive of the action back to the personal, albeit on a different plane, which in some sense comprehends the first two stages. Benardete's penetrating analysis uncovers, in the figure of Achilles, the paradigmatic Homeric hero, an increasingly complex character, who is haunted, in his grief at the loss of Patroclus, by his suspicion of the guilt he must assume for his death, which he tries to overcome in so many ineffective ways. It is only with his choice in the end to give back to Priam the corpse of Hector that the hero "rejoins the family of men." In tracing this trajectory, Benardete discloses us what it means for the plot of the Iliad to be the tragedy of Achilles.

This volume is a reprint of Benardete's Ph.D. dissertation, submitted in 1955 to the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago and reprinted in two issues of the St. John's Review of 1985.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Until his death in 2001, Seth Benardete was Professor of Classics at New York University and author of numerous works on ancient Greek philosophy and literature. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 140 pages
  • Publisher: St. Augustines Press; 1 edition (July 20, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1587310015
  • ISBN-13: 978-1587310010
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #365,905 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Clothed in Armor and Epithets, April 3, 2009
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This review is from: 05 Achilles and Hector: Homeric Hero (Paperback)
This is an excellent book. The author presents two aspects of the epics, the action in 1200BC, and the story in 800BC. He presents The Iliad, for example, in these two aspects; a war that happened in 1200BC, and the epic itself as a poem from 800BC, and also the window from which we observe that war. In the war the Homeric heroes are clothed and defined as heroes by their armor. ("Without our armor we are as naked as women.") In the poem itself they are linguistically clothed and defined by their epithets. Each line in Homer has six slots to fill, does he just add two adjectives and an adverb to each SOV sentence to fill them? No, the author's careful analysis of the Heroic epithets draws out their meaning and contribution to the story. What readers often sense today as needless repetition, to Homer's hearers in 700BC must have seemed like animation and dramatic emphasis.
Prof. Peter C. Patton, Ph.D.
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