Subsystems in Ithaca

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Death, destruction, disorder; this was what was destined to engulf Ithaca had Odysseus not been able to return home and reclaim his place at the head of Achaean society. The basis of a civilization’s culture is made up of five subsystems according to Colin Renfrew in his Emergence of Civilisation. Renfrew’s five subsystems are named as subsistence, technological, social/ political, symbolic, and trade/ communication. These subsystems are all interconnected, allowing for actions to exist in multiple subsystems simultaneously. This connection is what “gives human culture its unique potential for growth.” While the connection of the subsystems allows for growth as Renfrew states, when one of the five begins to collapse, each aspect of the culture is directly affected leading to a failing of the whole. In The Odyssey, the overlapping influences from the subsistence, social/ political, and trade/ communication subsystems in the early Greek culture combine to form the events taking place during Telemachus’s journey to find out about his father.
Humans cannot survive without food, which is what the subsystem subsistence is all about. Subsistence includes any part of society or “actions relating to the distribution of food resources.” In the Odyssey, the issue of distributing food is primarily seen in Odysseus’s home of Ithaca. The suitors of Penelope according to Telemachus continue to “infest our palace day and night,/ they butcher our cattle, our sheep, our fat goats,/ feasting themselves sick, swilling our glowing wine/ as if there’s no tomorrow”. In this speech by Telemachus it is seen that the best his palace has to offer is being eaten and devoured by the suitors. As the suitors are “guests” in the house of Telemachus and Penelo...

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... an understanding of interactions between subsystems in a culture enhance the understanding of individuals and the effects of actions taken by them. In the Odyssey, the ripple effect felt by Odysseus’s absence has the influence to cause actions that outline key aspects of the story and create the issues that make the story an example for many. This collapse of one subsystem generates problems and complications in all other subsystems because they are all interconnected. The story itself is an attempt by the characters to mend the subsystems of their culture by one path or another. Without fixing the issues, the entire culture would have collapsed.

Works Cited

Homer. The Odyssey. Translated by Robert Fagles. New York: Penguin Group, 1996.
Renfrew, Colin. The Emergence of Civilisation: The Cyclades and the Aegean in the Third Millennium B.C. London: Metheun 1972.

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