Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Aeneid and Odyssey - A Comparison between Aeneas, Achilles and Odysseus
Aeneid and Odyssey - A Comparison between Aeneas, Achilles and Odysseus     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   A comparison between  Virgil's hero, Aeneas, and the Homeric heroes, Achilles and Odysseus, brings up  the question concerning the relevance of the difference between the Homeric  heroes and Aeneas. The differences in the poets' concerns are explained by the  fact that Virgil lived many years after Homer, giving Virgil the advantage of a  more developed literary and philosophical society than Homer had at his  disposal. But the question remains: how are the differences between the Homeric  heroes and Aeneas relevant to the epic at large? This question will be answered  by first pointing out the differences between Greek and Roman society, then  explaining how those differences relate to the heroes of the three epics at  hand, and finally explaining how these differences allow Virgil to portray the  Roman values and way of life as more structured and oriented towards a  greater-good.      Ã       The differences in Greek and Roman societies arise primarily because of the  different time periods in which they existed. But the geologic characteristics  of Greece also played a role in the particularities of Greek society. The Greek  peninsula is a mountainous region with neighboring islands that are known for  their individualistic nature; in Homer's Odyssey islands are often occupied  either by very few people or by people that are socially inept such as cannibals  or the Cyclops. The Greek society, which was composed of various individual and  independent city-states, followed from its geological surroundings since  communication was such a difficult task. The few cultural aspects of life, such  as language and religion, were the only things that gave...              ... between Aeneas and the  Homeric heroes, given an account of the historical and mythological background  of Rome and demonstrated that the Roman way of life is necessarily more  structured and community oriented than the Homeric Greek way of life.Ã    Virgil wrote The Aeneid as an ode to the greatness of Rome, we could imagine  that as he wrote it he was in constant competition with Homer because The Aeneid  was a proclamation of greatness for the Romans as the Homeric epics were for the  Greeks. But Virgil took advantage of the flaws that the Homeric Heroes had and  gave the corresponding virtues to Aeneas thus ensuring Aeneas' superiority and  consequently Rome's superiority.     Ã       Works Cited and Consulted:     Homer. The Odyssey. Trans. Robert Fagles. New York: 1996     Virgil.Ã   The Aeneid.Ã   Translated by Robert Fitzgerald.Ã   New  York: Vintage Books, 1990.     Ã                        
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