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The fighting reaches a new pitch, and things look dire for the Achaean leaders. They do what they can, and so does Hera. Book 14 and its famous ‘Dios Apate’ appear strange nestled between bouts of gruesome fighting, but like many things that seem out of place in the Iliad, it serves a wider purpose. In this episode I explain why this strange event belongs where it does, and how it explores on of the Iliad’s more prominent themes: the gulf between the gods and mortals.
Sources used for this episode:
* Golden, L. (1989). ΔιἘς ἀπάτη and the Unity of “Iliad” 14. Mnemosyne, 42(1/2), 1–11. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4431774
* Griffin, J. (1980). Homer on life and death. Oxford University Press.
By AnthonyThe fighting reaches a new pitch, and things look dire for the Achaean leaders. They do what they can, and so does Hera. Book 14 and its famous ‘Dios Apate’ appear strange nestled between bouts of gruesome fighting, but like many things that seem out of place in the Iliad, it serves a wider purpose. In this episode I explain why this strange event belongs where it does, and how it explores on of the Iliad’s more prominent themes: the gulf between the gods and mortals.
Sources used for this episode:
* Golden, L. (1989). ΔιἘς ἀπάτη and the Unity of “Iliad” 14. Mnemosyne, 42(1/2), 1–11. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4431774
* Griffin, J. (1980). Homer on life and death. Oxford University Press.