Seduction In The Odyssey

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In Stanley Lombardo’s translation of Homer’s ancient Greek epic Iliad, the gods and goddesses intervene in the Trojan war and make a difference in the outcome of events, such as breaking the truce between the Trojans and the Greeks, providing distractions for the Greeks’ advantage by using the art of seduction, and deceiving the enemy by disguise. Throughout the entirety of Homer’s Iliad, Hera and Athena create an influence in their favored sides’ lives by their actions and words. From the beginnings of the Trojan War to the end, Hera and Athena’s intentions to destroy the Trojans are evident as they help their follower’s win the war by recruiting Poseidon, who encourages the Greeks they will be victorious. The two go as far as to betray one …show more content…

Hera and Athena are just two out of all the gods who interfere in the war and change the outcome of some events, as a result. If Hera had not deceived her husband, Zeus, into ordering Athena into breaking the truce, the war would have come to an end much sooner. Choosing the option to obey Zeus’s orders from his wife, and joining Hera to destroy the Trojans, Athena’s plan to convince Pandarus to hurt Menelaus results in the Greeks and Trojans breaking the truce. If the two goddesses had not intervened in the war, the Greeks could have had a different outcome in the end. Would the Greeks have lost more in the war without Hera and Athena? Would the Greeks have done better without the goddesses help? Either way, the two goddesses make a strong impact in the war and the side they favored. As a result, the Greeks win the Trojan war with the help of their gods and goddesses’

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