Dynamic Character In Homer's The Odyssey

596 Words2 Pages

Throughout Athena’s appearances in the various mythological stories, she is a relatively static character. For begin, her role in Perseus’ Adventures (GHM 3.12.b.), in Apollodorus’ Library, portrays her entirely as a guardian angel of sorts, for it is the shield that she gave Perseus that allowed him to kill Medusa. “...and while Athena guided his hand and he looked with averted gaze on a brazen shield….” (GHM 2.4.3, pg 267). She is clearly benevolent if her character is taken at full value in this instance. However, in another work, Homer’s The Iliad, book 5 (GHM 3.8. Homer’s Gods and Heroes in Battle: Iliad, Book 5) Athena is much more war-like, no longer is she aiding an intrepid adventurer in a quest to rid evil; now she picks, among other gods, the sides of the Greeks (Achaeans). …show more content…

Athena and her allied gods continued to intervene, somewhat unfairly to their opponents, playing the battle as if they were armchair tacticians throwing pointless pawns at the enemy, very little regard to the lives individually, merely wanting to claim victory. In a third, and contradicting, appearance of Athena in Apollodorus’ Library, Teiresias: A Transgendered Seer (GHM 5.7), Teiresias is an unrivaled seer of uncanny ability, even aiding Odysseus in the form a ghost in the Odyssey. The story of how he became blinded is a point of contention, but according to Pherekydes, he was blinded by Athena (GHM 3.6.7). According to him, Teiresias saw the goddess Chariklo “stark naked” (GMH 3.6.7), and Athena, being a dear friend to Chariklo, covered the seer’s eyes with her hands, which blinded him, It is important to note that Athena did not explicitly want to blind him, merely stop him from seeing Chariklo.

Open Document