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Book Cover
E-book
Author Lesser, Rachel H

Title Desire in the Iliad The Force That Moves the Epic and Its Audience
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2023

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Description 1 online resource (253 p.)
Contents Intro -- Halftitle page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Dedication page -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- The Characters' Triangular Desires -- The Plot(s) of the Iliad and This Book -- Narrative Desire -- Sympathetic and Empathetic Desires -- Pain, Pleasure, and Satisfaction -- 1. Triangles of Desire at the Iliad's Opening -- The First Triangle: Chryses, Chryseis, and Agamemnon -- Kalchas' Inflammatory Mediation -- The Second Triangle: Achilleus, Briseis, and Agamemnon -- Pothē for Achilleus -- Nestor's Ineffective Intervention
2. Achilleus' Plot and Divine Determination -- Achilleus' Narrative Agency -- Chryses' Paradigmatic Resolution -- Back to Achilleus-and Zeus -- A Third, Divine Triangle of Desire -- Hephaistos as Mediator -- Evaluating the Divine Resolution -- 3. The Superplot's Beginning -- From the Main Plot to the Superplot -- Why the Greek Army Fights -- The Desires of Menelaos and Paris -- Helen as Subject of Desire -- The Triangle of Helen, Paris, and Aphrodite -- Paris' Desire, Again -- 4. The Desire for War and Its Discontents -- The Divine Determinants of War -- Allegiance and Alignment with the Greeks
Diomedes' Aristeia -- The Gods' Involvement in the Battle -- The Trojan Women's Desires -- Andromache's Proleptic Longing -- 5. The Renewal of Achilleus' Destructive Desires -- From the Superplot to the Main Plot -- The Embassy to Achilleus: Reconciliation or an Insult Revisited? -- The Revival and Modification of Achilleus' Desires -- Phoinix's Speech -- Achilleus' Obstinacy -- 6. The Oppositional Desires of Hera and Patroklos -- The Progression of Achilleus' Plot through Zeus's Will -- Hera's Plot -- The Deception of Zeus -- Zeus's Revised Will -- Patroklos' Challenge to Achilleus' Plot
Patroklos' Aristeia -- 7. Achilleus' Mourning and Revenge -- Achilleus' New Triangular Desires -- An Incomplete and Unsatisfactory Resolution -- The Queerness of Achilleus' Attachment to Patroklos -- Achilleus' Aristeia -- Achilleus Meets Hektor -- 8. Desire for Lamentation -- Priam's and Hekabe's Desires -- Andromache's Melancholic Mourning -- Achilleus' Persistent Mourning -- Approaching the End -- Resolutions of Desire -- Audience (Dis)satisfaction -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary The first study to examine desire in the Iliad in a comprehensive way, explaining its relationship to the epic's narrative structure and audience reception. The author offers a new reading of the poem that shows how the characters' desires, especially those of mortal hero Achilleus and divine king Zeus, motivate plot and engage the audience
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Subject Homer. Iliad.
SUBJECT Iliad (Homer) fast
Subject Desire in literature.
Desire in literature
Form Electronic book
ISBN 019269166X
9780192691668