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Homeric World View Essay

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There are several features that characterize the Homeric worldview. The Greeks were in self-governing cities called poleis, or city-states, that held them extremely apart creating controversy and competition. Regardless of their differences, they all allied and viewed foreigners as “barbarians”; they viewed themselves as the center of the world whereas the rest of world was considered uncivilized. Nonetheless, through the great stories of Homer written in heroic verses, or rhythm, we are able to expand our understanding on the Homeric worldview in religion. For instance, In the Iliad, the gods served as divine umpires, which means they watched the actions, commented, and could had enforced rules, but had no significant role on a human’s course of life. …show more content…

A great example of the human condition is illustrated on an ekphrasis, a literary device in clear visual image, in the famous Shield of Achilles. After the in medias res, or the entrance of the story in the middle of things, the Iliad makes an emphasis on the human conditions. As the author mentioned, its overall message directly suggest that we must be prepared for the results of our own actions and understand that it will cause suffering to both ourselves and our loved ones. For instance, after Achilles denied the fight for the Greek cause in book 16 of the Iliad, Patroclus suits in Achilles armor and sets “on finding Hector, eager to strike him down” but ends up being killed by the Trojan leader himself. The human condition of the Odyssey is also demonstrated after Odysseus’s nostos, or heroic homecoming, of ten years results in consequences in his kingdom of Ithaca. After Suitors plagued the kingdom along with their petitions to declare Odysseus as dead, Telemachus mentions that those “devouring one man’s [livestock] and rendering no [payment] for it … shall die”; taking the consequences of his father’s absence at his own

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