Comparing Fate And Justice In Oresteia And The Odyssey

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References to Greek literature can be found all throughout time and in western culture. Greek mythology is thought to have influenced arts, literature, sciences and language. Historians have considered Ancient Greece to be one of the most influential societies on modern day life. Greek literature poems, tragedies, and comedies have challenged authors in the past to strive to be as great the Athenian authors, but none have been able to match. Tragedies such as, Oresteia and The Odyssey, gives readers an inside look into life in Ancient Greece. These two stories also give a perception of Greek morals, ideologies, values and much more. Even though these two tragedies may be entirely different the two have many major themes in common, fate and justice. The themes of fate and justice are not only portrayed in these two stories, but in nearly all Greek mythology.
Oresteia is a …show more content…

After his ten-year journey to reach Ithaca, where he was king, his subjects assumed he was dead. Throughout the epic poem, Odysseus is consistently prevented from returning home by higher powers. Fate, in The Odyssey, is the consequences that are placed upon individuals due to certain actions. While on a ship heading home to Ithaca, Poseidon sends a storm at Odysseus being angry that Odysseus blinded his son. When Odysseus made the decision to blind Polyphemus, he did so in order to escape. But, the consequence is that Poseidon decides to send a storm to set him off course. Odysseus blinded the cyclops without even knowing that he was destined to do so. “Once there was a prophet here, who said that all these things in the future would come to pass, That I would be deprived of my sight at Odysseus hands,” (The Odyssey, 127). Odysseus and the others are never told what their future may hold and no matter how hard they would try, they were unable to get out of their

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