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What Is The Characters Of The Doloneia Of Homer

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The Doloneia of Homer
Throughout most of The Iliad of Homer, the reader can notice the constant use of the tradition of polemos (greek for fight, battle, Daemon of war), in other words, the epic is full of detailed description of several scenes of open warfare in which one of the central subjects is the hero’s aristeia. This fact can be illustrated by the most prototypical example: the moment in which Achilleus decided to rejoin the war in Books 19 through 21. However, in Book 10 of The Iliad, often called Doloneia, the whole environment changes drastically. For the first time in the epic, the Homeric tradition of polemos is not in place, instead, Homer adopted another ancient greek literary tradition - the lokhos (ancient greek for ambush). In this tradition, the action does not happening in battlefields, but in the backstages of war instead. This notable change leads the reader to wonder whether Book 10 integrally fits The Iliad.
When analyzing the Doloneia, the various differences from previous books are notable: right in the first lines, one can notice that the setting of the story from Book 10 diverges from the standard. In “[n]ow beside their ships the other great men of the Achaians slept night long, with the soft bondage of slumber upon them [...] Agamemnon, shepherd of the people, was held by no sweet sleep as he pondered deeply within him” (10:1-4), it is stated that the place of the story is the Achaians’ camp not the battlefield and the time is the night not the

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