Examples Of Greatness In The Odyssey

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Greatness is something achieved through willpower and luck. A person becomes great by accomplishing a task that is considered subjectively difficult in the mind of the judger. The Odyssey, Beowulf, and Unbroken will be used as reference materials in order to give examples of concepts.
Greatness isn’t a trait that we are born with, and so it is developed. However, there may be certain traits that the individual inherits that may give them an advantage, or disadvantage, in completing the task. All of the main characters in The Odyssey, Beowulf, and Unbroken happen to be male. Because of this, the odds of them achieving greatness will be higher than not being a male (as is the case in older books where greatness comes in the form of physical strength, and in such cases most women are not viewed as having equal strength). This is how luck can affect whether or not one can achieve greatness. In Beowulf, the unknown writer(s) states that Grendel’s mother,”No Female, no matter How fierce, could have come with a man’s strength..to save her life..took a single …show more content…

In the case of Unbroken, women worked at factories contributing to the war and didn’t receive the fame that war heroes did. They were just never considered for fame outside of gratitude for their work. All three stories gave women a similar role in which they stayed at home and took care of the house because of societal norms. By not being taught weapon use, these women were generally set to fail in a society where fame is won in tallied kills/war. In any of the books the likelihood of achieving mentioned greatness is lower if the person happened to be a female, however this isn’t always the case in modern society because of feminism. Greatness also depends on who is judging the individual. A group of women may judge a woman in swordfighting differently than a group of trained

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