Achilles’ Character as an Internal Critique of Warmongering Ideals in the Iliad Cover Image

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 Marren
Subject(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.

  • Issue Year: XVII/2023
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 550-565
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: English