Odysseus As A Monster In Homer's Odyssey

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Monsters, and more generally, the monstrous, tend to be viewed as alien or perverted versions of humanity. In the Odyssey especially, there is a whole array of monsters, from the inhuman mouth of Charybdis to the superhuman enchantress Circe. In general, monsters exist to test a hero’s worthiness to gain kleos or honor, ensuring they exhibit the proper noble attributes. Throughout the Odyssey, Homer forces Odysseus through many encounters with different monstrous creatures, each examining a different heroic characteristic from different angles.
During the beginning of his nostos, Odysseus swaggers around with an cocky air, returning victorious …show more content…

His decision kills many of his men in horrific ways, “their brains [splattering] out and [oozing] into the dirt” (Homer 69). Of course, with each sacrifice comes a classically brilliant Odyssean method of escape. However, his escape comes at a cost: his crew’s lives. In order to be a hero, Odysseus must obtain as much kleos as he can get, and cannot share it with his crew. As Polyphemus devours his crew, Odysseus sits pondering on “how [he] might make him pay and win glory from Athena” (Homer 70). This line of thought shows the motivation behind Odysseus's actions. While he may additionally want revenge for his crew, he truly only desires kleos. As such, Odysseus faces the second trial of Polyphemus, the first of …show more content…

Immortal cows, these animals are monstrous in both their nature and their master, Helios. The trial of the cattle stands as a conglomeration of all the previous tests of sacrifice, including both aspects of fully heeding advice as well as knowing when to leave others to their fate. In this case, Odysseus does not decide to visit the island of the sun, his crew, and more specifically Eurylochus, pressures him into docking despite both Circe’s and Tiresias’s warnings. Landing on the island of the sun becomes the trigger for the mutinous thoughts of Odysseus's crew, and they finally devour the cattle of the sun, despite all the dire warnings Odysseus gave them. When they finally set said off the island, Odysseus is the lone survivor of a horrific storm that hits them. In this trial of sacrifice, Odysseus does not bear the responsibility for the death of his men, since he himself did not choose to come to the island and he recalled all the advice given to this. His choice to listen completes the first part of the trial of the cattle. The second aspect of the trial was his willingness to leave his crew to their fate, not trying to change fate after all that he can do he has done. The crew made their own choices, and as a mere mortal, Odysseus does not have the right to intervene in their

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