Archetypes In The Odyssey Essay

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Archetypes of the Odyssey and the Connections
Archetypes bring order to everyday life- without them there would be chaos. Human use them to predict what may happen, and to empathize with people all around the world. Homer’s the Odyssey has several of these archetypes. The Odyssey is an epic poem, said to have been written down in the time of Ancient Greece. Archetypes are characters, actions, or situations that are generally a prototype of human life. Today, readers can gain insight through the archetypes in the Odyssey. Three main archetypes are: the hero, the monster or villain, and the crossroads.
The hero represented in the Odyssey is Odysseus. Odysseus always places his trust in the gods. In the book, The Hero’s Journey, page something, …show more content…

The suitors were also considered villains. The monster or villain is a crucial archetype- without it, there would be no one to stand against. The suitors are bullies. In line 1228, a suitor hits Odysseus, disguised as a beggar, with a stool. They even insult his family by taking advantage of his wife and planning to murder his son. The suitors would be the kind of men society would similarly hate now. The cyclops are classic monsters. The article, Monster archetypes in the Odyssey, says, “This is a monster who would function in the same horrifying capacity in a modern horror film. Meaning, the same terrors of the ancient Greeks are just as scream-worthy today. For example, in entertainment the idea of a villain with facial disfigurement and homicidal tendencies is common. Scylla and Charybdis are two other common monster depictions. In line 821 of the Odyssey, “She(Scylla) ate them as they shrieked there, in her den…” The crewmembers were not instantly killed as Scylla ate. The Odyssey compares Scylla’s feast to a man surfcasting, making the deaths sad and bloody. The placement of Scylla and Charybdis creates a different archetype as well: a …show more content…

There is a small strait between Scylla and Charybdis. “Scylla to port and on our starboard bean Charybdis…” Odysseus must pick which monster to sail nearest to- the monster that will be less dangerous. In other words, Odysseus must pick the lesser of two evils. Put into a more modern context, the idiom “stuck between a rock and a hard place” perfectly describes Odysseus’ dilemma. In another situation, Odysseus must decide to plunder the Cyclops Polyphemus’ home, or wait to meet him. In lines 165-171, the crew wants to plunder, and Odysseus must weigh the benefits or ramifications. Either choice could have dangerous consequences. The term, “a crossroads”, comes from an actual cross of roads. It is now used as an analogy of a crucial decision that could take the traveler in opposite directions.The crew’s final crossroads is when they consider eating the cattle of the sun god. In lines 865-875, they contemplate starving or eating the cattle and dying quickly. The crew calls famine the “most pitiful”. It can be concluded that the Greeks did not find starvation an honorable way to die, leading the crewmembers to pick a fatal road to traverse. However, it was just the Greeks who had

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