Consider the dolphin. We’ve all seen Flipper, the loveable rescue dolphin who fights crime and injustices upon his reef. We love the cheerful chips, whistles, and crackles made by this playful creature and oftentimes dream of blithely tossing fish into their appreciative open mouths. At least I do. But do we know everything about the dolphin? How has this animal impacted cultures of the past? How does the dolphin behave with the rest of the world? What is the dolphin exactly? Let’s find out.
To begin this adventure, we must go back to ancient times. Dolphins make their way into many different societies like Greece, Hawaii, India, and the rest of the world. Dolphins are considered by many to be magical creatures, friends of the gods, and highly intelligent. The classic Greek myth of the dolphin begins when Dionysius, the god of wine and debauchery, is abducted by Etruscan pirates thinking him a rich prince whom they could ransom. After out at sea for a time, Dionysius caused grape vines to grow on the ships’ riggings he then used to make an obscene amount of wine. The wasted pirates were at the mercy of the god of wine. He turned the oars into serpents, frightening the pirates into the water where Dionysius left them to drown. The pitiful cries of the pirates softened Dionysius’ heart, so he changed them into dolphins. Ever since then, dolphins have been helpful creatures and friends of man, seeking to redeem themselves for angering Dionysius. The seafarers during the age of exploration considered the dolphins to be good fortune in travels. Dolphins oftentimes would leap around ships and guide them through unknown waters into safe harbors. In Minoan and Maori (Pacific Islander) myths, the dolphin was a messenger of the gods and is oftentimes seen on reliefs, murals, and pottery being ridden by ancient deities.
The average dolphin weighs between 440-660 pounds and is around eight feet in length. These specifications are pertinent to the bottle-nose dolphin, the one that is all gray and featured in the Flipper television series. There are actually forty different species of dolphins, all of which have differing weights and lengths but are close to the bottlenose dolphin. The smallest dolphin weighs about 90 pounds and is four feet long. About five species of dolphin live in fresh water sources; the rest in oceans. Dolphins are carnivores, eating mostly fish, squid, and some crustaceans. Luckily for the dolphin, no other ocean predator really pursues the dolphin as a food source. An occasional shark may get in a skirmish with one, but other than these few and far between instances, the dolphins lives a peaceful life free from worry. The largest cause of dolphin death is the human, in reality. Dolphins near Japan are killed for eating. The Japanese decimate Pacific dolphin populations frequently. Near the Balkan countries, native fishermen see dolphins as a competition for fish and a nuisance. Hundreds of dolphins in the area are killed and their fat used for oil. Dolphins are killed inadvertently by humans, too. Many get trapped in fishing nets, and some dolphins choke on waste thrown in the ocean.
Many scientists believe dolphins possess intelligence to rival men. This is dumb. It’s probably the same people who say monkeys are our cousins. Who’s in the cage/tank, then? But dolphins do have a higher intellect than most animals, capable of compassion, playful interaction, even vanity. Dolphins have a brain size relatively big for their body, bigger than a chimpanzee’s, for instance. Dolphins are able to mimic human gestures like waving. They also recognize commands and many words humans use after much repetition and respond by chirping, whistling, or whatever they do. There are countless cases of dolphins saving humans from drowning or even sharks. These heroic creatures seem to have an affinity for humans and crave their attention. In an experiment to test dolphin intelligence, marine biologists placed a mirror in a dolphin tank and watched the reactions of the animals. The dolphins immediately noticed their reflections and made faces at the mirror, blowing bubbles and doing somersaults. In a further experiment, scientists marked a dolphin with a marker its side and put it back in the tank. The dolphin immediately swam over to the mirror and stared at its new tattoo.
What many don’t realize is that the Orca (Killer Whale) is a member of the dolphin family. Orcas are more aggressive than dolphins. They hunt seals and even sharks and tend to swim in more open waters. These great mammals have absolutely no predators. Nothing hunts them, not even humans. Orcas have a similar relationship to humans as dolphins do. In SeaWorld, the Orca Shamu interacts with human trainers and members of the audience in fun shows. They do have a sort of affinity for humans, not to the extent of dolphins — but still very playful, nonetheless. Orcas are bigger and more powerful animals, and orcas do know it. Sometimes, orcas attack humans thinking them seals or out of frustration from excessive human dominance. There have been several cases of SeaWorld orcas attacking human trainers with some cases resulting in fatalities. The Killer Whale Kilitik has had three documented cases of killing trainers.
So I encourage all to find a dolphin somehow and play with it; the same for an orca, although that one may be more difficult. Wild dolphins don’t even run away from you, so there’s really no excuse, unless you can’t swim. Right here in the James River there are a veritable plethora of porpoises, a close cousin of the dolphin. They can be a viable substitute for the dog of the sea. It is an experience that cannot be rivaled. Pursue your passion, and experience the amazing companionship of the dolphin.
Līve’s fourth studio album, The Distance to Here,is a very full, high-quality album. Many of course will think it inferior to their sophomore effort (while called Līve), Throwing Copper — and it is difficult to disagree, in one sense. It is hard to compete with “Lightning Crashes,” “Pillar of Davidson,” “All Over You,” “Iris,” et al. Though, as we saw last time with Sting’s Mercury Falling, it’s just quite possible this effort from Līve, despite the lesser critical acclaim, may be a better, more solid album. Certainly the “lows” of The Distance to Here are not as low as the “lows” of Throwing Copper. Even if the “highs” of The Distance to Here are not as high as the “highs” of Throwing Copper, it would still be a more balanced, thoroughly solid album — but again, the point is not to place albums from the same artist in competition with each other. The point here is to remind ourselves of forgotten gems, one of which is certainly Līve’s 1999 album The Distance to Here.
“The Dolphin’s Cry”
The initial a capella opening is gruff enough and soulful enough to remind us the reasons why Līve were so popular: the band itself was a mix of pounding rhythms and driving sounds, more often than not coupled with intelligent and imaginative lyrics — it is music, after all. The figurative language lead singer/songwriter Ed Kowalczyk invokes in this song are particularly appealing, in a mysteriously intriguing way: “rose garden of trust,” “swoon of peace,” for examples. As with so many high-quality songs, the main theme of this debut song is love: “Love will lead us, all right / Love will lead us, she will lead us.” I see no problem personifying Love as a female for this song: Wisdom is personified as a woman throughout Proverbs. Kowalczyk further reminds us of the importance of living wisely while we are alive, driven by love — quite reminiscent of St. Paul in 1 Corinthians 13: “Life is like a shooting star / It don’t matter who you are / If you only run for cover, it’s just a waste of time. / We are lost ’til we are found / This phoenix rises up from the ground / And all these wars are over.” It’s hard to argue with the veracity of these ideas: it’s unlikely Kowalczyk didn’t have “Amazing Grace” partially in mind, but even if he didn’t, that we think of it when listening to this song supports its own worth. In a way, we are all like phoenixes, needing to be reborn through love, as the war-like enmity between us and God is ended through this rebirth (as St. Paul emphasizes in Ephesians 2). That the song is accompanied by a varied, driving music line is a nice bonus.
“The Distance”
I hesitate to say this song is anti-religion. Religion has gotten a bit of a rough treatment of late, and we would do well to remember “the place where religion finally dies” is Hell, not Heaven. Even so, there is undeniably an emphasis on personal experience — not necessarily “religious” in a watered-down, meaningless way we sometimes have when skeptically talking of “religious experiences,” but in a personalized, individualized, isolated event in which the Ruler of Heaven reaches down to the narrator in a palpable way. “I’ve been to pretty buildings, all in search of You / I have lit all the candles, sat in all the pews / The desert had been done before, but I didn’t even care / I got sand in both my shoes and scorpions in my hair,” says the narrator in verse 1. In a way he is right: it’s not always the right thing for us to do to mimic the experiences or lifestyles of other people who may have had some version of “success” in such a way (what does Jesus say to Peter, after all, but focusing on following Him the way Peter is supposed to, not just mimicking or worrying about how John is supposed to follow Him?). The chorus explains the narrator’s realization in trying to do faith simply by copying the motions and superficially understood lifestyles (i.e., not understood at all) of “religious people”: “Oh, the distance is not do-able / In these bodies of clay my brother / Oh, the distance, it makes me uncomfortable / Guess it’s natural to feel this way / Oh, let’s hold out for something sweeter / Spread your wings and fly.” I hesitate, likewise, to say the chorus is in favor of some ascetic rejection of the physical — more likely the song is reminding us genuine spirituality is not just a superficial “going through the motions,” “do what they do” sort of life. From a purely physical/material perspective, the distance between us and God should be frightening — it truly is unsurpassable simply by our own finite, physical endeavors. What the narrator (and we all) needs comes to him in verse 2: “My car became the church and I / The worshipper of silence there / In a moment peace came over me / And the One who was beatin’ my heart appeared.” The parallel to Elijah’s post-mountaintop experience is inescapable. Few better descriptions of God (“the One who was beatin’ my heart”) exists in rock music. Kowalczyk reminds us it isn’t the expensiveness of the pilasters or the amount of sculptures adorning the walls that make a building a church: it’s the presence of God that makes a lost soul a dwelling place for the Spirit of God, the Spirit of Peace, the One who is beatin’ all our hearts. The final outro thoughts, “This distance is dreamin’ / We’re already there,” are certainly true for a post-justification regenerate Christian. In a real way, the distance between us and God is no longer genuine distance — we only experience it, dreamlike, in a mirror darkly, because we are not fully glorified yet. We have dwelling in us a down payment of Eternal Life. We are already in Heaven tonight in a significant way. This is a truly great song.
“Sparkle”
“Love will overcome / This Love will make us men / Love will draw us in / To wipe our tears away.” That is self-explanatory, isn’t it? Any song about turning from hate to faith, driven by Love, declaring “the Giver became the Gift” (again, what exquisite ways Kowalczyk, for all his faults, describes God), encouraging us not to wait for more miracles or more Messiahs or wasting more chances — but see and embrace this Love now … how can it go wrong? It can’t. This one doesn’t.
“Run To the Water”
After three superb songs, it would be difficult for any band not from Dublin or Stockbridge to continue the streak. Līve, somehow, does it superlatively with “Run to the Water.” Superficially, the song sounds like a Cosmic Humanist/pantheist sort of ditty — but I refute such a claim. The chorus is too much like Isaiah 55:1 to be anything but truth: “Run to the water and find me there / Burnt to the core but not broken / We’ll cut through the madness / Of these streets below the moon / With a nuclear fire of love in our hearts.” I hope someday I have a nuclear fire of love in my heart for God and the things above (the things of Love). The bridge makes the veracity of the song doubly clear: “Yeah, I can see it now Lord / Out beyond all the breakin’ of waves and the tribulation / It’s a place and the home of ascended souls / Who swam out there in love.” The outro again, if a third witness be necessary, solidifies the intellectual, emotional complex of greatness that is this song: “Rest easy, baby, rest easy / And recognize it all as light and rainbows / Smashed to smithereens and be happy / Run to the water and find me there, oh / Run to the water.” I’m starting to realize I don’t listen to this album enough myself.
“Sun”
We sometimes get the impression songs that are too fast can’t have much depth to them, in part because the tempo and most likely the duration of the song preclude much profundity of insight — or, if any impressive bits of terse erudition occur, the brevity of the song prevents much if any development of said terse inkling. Such is the case with “Sun,” but its brief treatment of undeveloped thoughts works well somehow. Musically, it is an appreciated variation being so quick and driving, especially since after this number the album mellows out tempo-wise for most of its remainder. Lyrically, considering the Biblical parallelism so much of the album thus far has displayed, it would not be amiss to think the repetition of “sun” should not allow us to also think of “Son,” at least once in a while — nor would it be reading too much into the song to think Kowalczyk is also thinking of Jesus as the light of the world, especially in the chorus: “Sun sun merciful one / Sun sun / Sun sun won’t you lay down your light on us / Sun sun.” Certainly it would be easy to ridicule such a spiritual treatment of the chorus, favoring a literal interpretation, solely (if you’ll allow the expression). The verses, though, have too much (albeit brief) intellectual leaning toward a richer experience of the chorus: the verses are all about the need to recognize the material world (and this present incarnational experience of it) for what it is, allowing it its limitations and demanding we look beyond it to something more spiritual, more celestial, more meaningful, driven by “the force and the fire of love / That’s takin’ over my mind / Wakin’ me up / Obligin’ me to the sun / Obligin’ me to the sun” the narrator says at the end of verse two. In verse three, we are enjoined to satisfy our earthly, human desires in an appropriate way while we are in this incarnation, “But don’t eat the fruit ‘too low’ / Keep climbin’ for the kisses on the other side” — the other side of existence, the spiritual side of life. The end of the song says “All we need is to come into the sun / We’ve been in the dark for so long / All I need, all we need, all I need, all we need, yeah!” That isn’t inaccurate. So far it is at best difficult to find fault with this album.
“Voodoo Lady”
And then comes “Voodoo Lady.” Admittedly, the low point of the album, though only because of the inexplicably salty lyrics. At least it isn’t as bad as “Waitress” from Throwing Copper, which is admittedly a mild backhanded sort of compliment. Musically, the song is skillfully done and musically distinct from the rest of the album; it captures a Bayou Voodoo sinister mysterious atmosphere well without descending into too much darkness (it is still melodic and digestible, musically) — it is darker than Graceland, but not too dark. The lyrics, though, are off-putting. “It’s got that word in it,” as Frank says. Again, we aren’t here to super-spiritualize this album and “make it safe” by tacking on Bible verses. The earlier songs, though, are too close to the verses mentioned to be over-spiritualizing it. This song reminds me of King Saul’s encounter with the witch of Endor, but I’m not claiming Kowalczyk had that in mind. It seems to have that same sort of feel: dark, inappropriate, sinful, yet something true and surprising happens in the midst of all this haze and no one was really prepared for it, even if it was supposedly what they said they wanted to happen. Still and all, you wouldn’t hurt my feelings if you skipped this one. I usually do, since I’ve heard it before.
“Where Fishes Go”
This song does an impressive job of both maintaining the mood of the previous, somewhat disappointing, song while also reviving the better lyrical mentality of the songs before it. Though the tone of the song is one of irritation (in that the narrator has “found God / And He was absolutely nothin’ like me”), we shouldn’t be surprised when people find God does not match their inferior expectations — not everyone reacts with an upsurge of beautification. Some are, justly to an extent, even more downcast and frustrated, confronted with the realization their perceptions of reality have been altogether incorrect for the entire duration of their lives heretofore. Light dispels the darkness; it doesn’t make it feel better. The sad part of the song is that we are to understand the unfortunate nature of the narrator’s somewhat cowardly reaction — fleeing from the Light of God to hide in the sea “’cause that’s where fishes go / When fishes get the sense to flee.” We take the part of the chorus: “Whatcha doin’ in this darkness baby? / When you know that love will set you free. / Will you stay in the sea forever? / Drownin’ there for all eternity / Whatcha doin’ in this darkness baby? / Livin’ down where the sun don’t shine / Come on out into the light of love / Don’t spend another day / Livin’ in the sea.” On another note, this album was actually among the first ideas I had for journal articles over a year ago when we began Redeeming Pandora, but as the lyrics of this song (and the pervasive beach/sea/ocean motifs throughout the album) indicate, I knew it would be too soon, considering Brian’s death. Even almost two years later, it is still difficult to write about lyrics such as these, but we press on, knowing both the utter correctness and necessity of thinking about these ideas, comforted in part by the knowledge Brian is much better off than we are anyway. Don’t let the people you know stay out in the sea of darkness any longer. As Stevie Smith reminds us elsewhere: they aren’t waving … they’re drowning.
“Face and Ghost (The Children’s Song)”
The tempo slows down again quite a bit, as much of the latter half of the album does. Lyrically, the song is another impressive collection of tensions, conflicting perceptions, ambiguities, and paradoxes. The pervasive motifs of the sun, turning from darkness to light, the distractions of the ocean and the void, the mysterious place where the sky meets the land, all come again in this reflective yet yearning-filled song. The chorus of questions is something we all long for, perhaps increasingly so the further away from the simplicity of youth (innocence) we get: “Can you hear the children’s song? / Can you take me to that place? / Do you hear the pilgrim’s song? / Can you take me there?” We all want to go “high above the lamentation upon the desert plane,” where “the darkness turns to light.” I told you this album was worth listening to.
“Feel the Quiet River Rage”
With a brief return to a fast pace and driving lyrical presentation, Līve grabs us out of our wistful pensiveness with a reminder sometimes pain and water are good things: let’s not be afraid to “suffer the wound” and “never turn from love” and “never turn to hate.” We need to tear down the walls we construct to hide from the storm of living in a world that hates and fears us — that can do more harm to others than it can do good for us. “Tear it down and suffer the wound.” The River of Life, the River of Love has done the saving — let it flow; remember it is still flowing, even though the world is trying to be too loud for us to hear the quiet river rage.
“Meltdown”
Most likely the most abstruse song on the album, “Meltdown” also makes good sense if taken from the hermeneutical perspective we have taken thus far (that Līve is speaking truth more often than not). God is a consuming fire, is He not? Moses and the burning bush? the Pillar of Fire by night for the Israelites in the wilderness? Perhaps the song is about the revivifying effects of being in a committed relationship with a woman — but that doesn’t take away from the possibility that “We’re in a spiritual winter / And I long for the one who is / Fire!” makes a good deal of sense spiritually as well. “How could it be you’ve graced my night? / Like a pardon from the Governor / Like a transplant from the donor / Like a gift from the one who is / Fire! / Amongst the dreamers / You are in my heart.” Sounds pretty much like spiritual justification to me. That would make the eponymous “meltdown” actually a good thing (perhaps the best thing) — the spiritual winter, the heart of stone, all has been melted down by the One who is Fire.
“They Stood Up for Love”
Regardless of what the music video implies (since we all know much if not most of the time music videos are out of the creative hands of the artists themselves), this song is a completely true and possibly the best song on the album, which is a bold claim considering the insufficient praise given the album thus far. “We spend all of our lives goin’ out of our minds / Looking back to our birth, forward to our demise.” Instead we should be the people who “stood up for love,” who “live in the light.” I want to be the person who says “I give my heart and soul to the One.” We are inheritors of a great obligation, from Jesus and Stephen through the Apostles and generations of the Cloud of Witnesses who have stood up for Love, to the kids at Columbine and Virginia Tech and all our brothers and sisters around the world living a much more difficult life for Love than we can even conceive. Let us not let them down. Home, indeed, is where the heart is given up to the One.
“We Walk in the Dream”
The more I am trying to convince you how great this album is the more I am proving it to myself. For this penultimate song, I’ll just let the lyrics of Ed Kowalczyk do the talking (you can imagine how much better it is when accompanied with the rest of Līve’s music — but then stop imagining by actually listening to this song and the rest of this forgotten gem of an album):
“Dance With You”
It would be awfully disappointing for this album to end with a Cosmic Humanist sort of number, making us rethink all the interpretations and seemingly genuine lyrical offerings we have enjoyed throughout this outstanding album. And it is easy to feel that here: we can too easily get distracted by Kowalczyk’s use of “goddess” and “karmic” and wag a finger and say “nope, not Christian. Karma and goddesses are not Christian.” There’s no arguing that, but I don’t think Kowalczyk is using “goddess” for “God” — I’m pretty sure it’s just a nice way of referring to the lady he’s with — if it is an anthropomorphic description of the setting sun … well, so what? Tolkien, Homer, everybody calls the sun a woman once in a while. Why not Ed Kowalczyk this one time? And “karma” means “action.” Do we dispute the notion our actions in this life affect the life to come? After an album of oceans and rivers in conflict, the narrator is sitting on the beach, finally at peace, at one with God and nature (that can’t be a bad thing to desire, can it?), “aglow with the taste / Of the demons driven out / And happily replaced / With the presence of real love / The only one who saves.” You can’t truly find fault with that, can you? Read the chorus: “I wanna dance with you / I see a world where people live and die with grace / The karmic ocean dried up and leave no trace / I wanna dance with you / I see a sky full of the stars that change our minds / And lead us back to a world we could not face.” I’m pretty sure I want that, too. And if it takes the language of India to recognize this, what’s wrong with that? Verse two is an excellent description of the futility of life without God: “The stillness in your eyes / Convinces me that I / I don’t know a thing / And I been all around the world and I’ve / Tasted all the wines / A half a billion times / Came sickened to your shores / You show me what this life is for.” That last line is definitely one of my favorites of all time. The bridge continues this notion: “In this altered state / Full of so much pain and rage / You know we got to find a way to let it go.” We have to face this world now, while we are here — but that does not stop us from seeing the world, the life, the love to come.
And Back Again
I think I have just convinced myself The Distance to Here is a better album, with only one weak link (how many albums are truly elite from beginning to end, even “greatest hits” albums?), than Throwing Copper . Perhaps that is a bold claim, and as we’ve said throughout, we aren’t trying to set up any artists’ oeuvre against itself in competition, but I think the album supports such a claim (their sixth album, Birds of Pray, is good as well — very Trekian, the way their even-numbered albums are considered better than the odd). Nor do I think it is too much to claim listening to this forgotten gem of an album (with or without “Voodoo Lady”) is an act of worship. If you haven’t yet listened to and enjoyed and worshiped God through Līve’s The Distance to Here, you should get on that now. You will be better for it.
Every year countries develop new and different experimental weapons and methods to achieve respect and fear from other nations in a time of war. These experiments contribute heavily to the advancement of society, the progress of mankind, and the expansion of nations. America has had such an experiment and development in science. The Manhattan Project, the atomic bombing of Japan, and the aftermath of the bomb were pivotal moments in world events.
On the second of August in 1939, Albert Einstein and others wrote to President Franklin D. Roosevelt telling of the Nazis’ attempts to purify uranium-235. This process would be used to create an atomic bomb that had the potential to destroy cities in a matter of seconds. Shortly after the letter, the United States began the multi-billion-dollar assignment known as The Manhattan Project. The Manhattan Project was an extensive scientific experiment that could, in fact, change the world of war forever (Purohit).
The goal of the project was to develop a formula for refining uranium-235. It was not to create the actual bomb, as many mistakenly think. Over the span of six years, 1939-1945, more than two billion dollars were spent on the Manhattan Project. Some of the most brilliant men on the planet were working together to develop formulas for refining uranium. The hardest part of creating the project was to produce enough “enriched” uranium to sustain a chain reaction for a certain amount of time. A huge enrichment laboratory was made in Tennessee. An extraction system was developed that could separate the very useful U-235 and the completely useless U-238 isotopes. Robert Oppenheimer was the chief among the master minds who unleashed the atom bomb. He oversaw the project from beginning to completion ( Bellis). Progress on the project was slow and uneventful until August of 1942. At this time The Manhattan Project was reorganized and placed under the control of the United States Army. The official name of the project was actually The Manhattan Engineer District. More than one hundred and forty thousand civilians worked at various locations on The Manhattan Project. Some of these workers did not know what they were working on. The project was extremely classified.
On December 7, 1941, Japan attacked America at Pearl Harbor. This attack on American soil sparked a war in the Pacific. Almost immediately, on December 8, 1941, America responded with a declaration of war on Japan. President Roosevelt ordered the atomic bomb after getting word the bomb could be made and The Manhattan Project was indeed successful. Colonel J.C. Marshall was told to set up the top secret assignment of creating an atomic bomb so powerful it could destroy a city (Gonzales 33). Two different bombs were produced through this assignment. Both of the bombs worked differently. The bombs were named “Little Boy” and “Fat Man.” “Little Boy” was smaller than “Fat Man” and not as powerful (59). On July 16, 1945, a test bomb was unleashed at 5:29 in the morning. Many scientists believed the bomb would not work. Some prayed it would not because they knew the power it could have and were afraid of the destruction the bomb could cause. Nevertheless, the bomb succeeded in the test. The explosion was massive, and the flash was blinding. Later newspapers said a blind girl could see the flash from one hundred and twenty miles away. The bomb was ready. America had in its possession an item that could truly destroy a city along with millions of lives (Purohit).
Many of the creators of the terrifying bomb had mixed reactions. Some believed it should not be used. Many immediately signed petitions saying the “monster” should not be unleashed. Robert Oppenheimer was extremely excited about the success of the project but was also very scared. He quoted a fragment of the Bhagavad Gita by saying, “I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.” Isidor Rabi, another extremely important contributor to the creation of the bomb, thought equilibrium in nature had been mixed up, as if mankind had become a threat to the world it inhabited. This discovery would mark the beginning of the atomic age of warfare, a huge advancement for all nations.
On August 6, 1945, a B-29 bomber named the Enola Gay took off from the island of Tinian and made the six-hour journey to Japan. The pilot of the aircraft was Colonel Paul Tibbets. The bomber’s main target was the city of Hiroshima. Hiroshima had a civilian population of three hundred thousand. It was an extremely important military center, containing forty-three thousand soldiers (DOE). The atomic bomb named “Little Boy” was released from the Enola Gay at 8:15 in the morning. The bomb measured 9.84 feet long and had a diameter of twenty-eight inches. It weighed a remarkable 8,900 pounds. The bomb was dropped at an elevation of thirty-one thousand feet (“Dimensions”). The city was alive with activity. People were walking in the streets, kids playing before school, and men and women were making their way to work. The people closest to the explosion died instantly. Their bodies were obliterated into black char. Birds were incinerated in mid-air. Shadows of bodies were burned onto walls, and clothing was melted onto skin. Fires broke out everywhere, creating one massive firestorm blowing furiously across the land destroying anyone who had withstood the first part of the blast (DOE). Staff Sergeant George Caron, the tail gunner of the Enola Gay, describes what he saw: “The Mushroom cloud was a spectacular sight, a bubbling mass of purple and gray smoke, and you could see it had a red-core in it and everything was burning inside. It looked like lava molasses covering a whole city.” Two-thirds of the city was destroyed instantly. The co-pilot, Captain Robert Lewis, stated, “Where we had seen a clear city two minutes before, we could no longer see a city. We could see smoke and fires creeping up the sides of mountains.” Within three miles of the explosion, sixty thousand buildings were completely demolished. A survivor of the attack described the victims as follows:
The appearance of people was … well, they all had skin blackened by burns. … They had no hair because their hair was burned, and at a glance you couldn’t tell whether you were looking at them from in front or in back. … They held their arms bent [forward] like this … and their skin — not only on their hands, but on their faces and bodies too — hung down. … If there had been only one or two such people … perhaps I would not have had such a strong impression. But wherever I walked I met these people. … Many of them died along the road — I can still picture them in my mind — like walking ghosts (Rosenberg).
The goal of this bombing was not to merely destroy military forces; it was to demolish a city (Rosenberg).
All communications were destroyed in the bombing leaving Hiroshima stranded. The government eventually received different reports from the outskirts of the city about fires and large amounts of smoke. Sixteen hours later, the Japanese government finally received confirmation of what had happened. They realized America had unleashed the most powerful weapon known to mankind on the city of Hiroshima (DOE).
America was not done with its unleashing of weapons of mass destruction. Although America did give Japan the chance to surrender between bombings, Japan refused. The next target was the city of Kokura. Kokura was a massive collection of war industries. The second option was Nagasaki. They ended up having to settle for Nagasaki due to inclement weather. The plane carrying the second bomb was named Bock’s Car (“Bombing”). Piloting the aircraft was Charles W. Sweeney. Sweeney said his greatest fear was “goofing up.” He also stated, “I would rather face the Japanese than Tibbets in shame if I made a stupid mistake.” The second bomb, “Fat Man,” was much heavier than “Little Boy.” This made the aircraft more difficult to pilot.
The bombing of Nagasaki seemed jinxed from the beginning. Many things went wrong such as bad weather, bad visibility, faulty communications, and even a malfunction with the bomb itself. Despite the many close calls, Sweeney still accomplished his goal. They left Tinian Island at 3:40 in the morning on August 9. The plane headed for Kokura, but due to inclement weather and malfunctions with the extra fuel supply, they had to settle for the second option of Nagasaki. Nagasaki was a major ship building city and military port (Glines). The second atomic bomb exploded over the city of Nagasaki at 11:02 am. A reporter flying in the plane behind the Bock’s Car said, “We watched a giant pillar of purple fire, 10,000 feet high, shoot upward like a meteor coming from earth instead of from outer space” (Glines). About two hundred thousand people were in the city of Nagasaki when the bomb exploded. A survivor of the Nagasaki bombing explains a scene he remembers distinctly as follows:
The pumpkin field in front of the house was blown clean. Nothing was left of the whole thick crop, except that in place of the pumpkins there was a woman’s head. I looked at the face to see if I knew her. It was a woman of about forty. She must have been from another part of town — I had never seen her around here. A gold tooth gleamed in the wide-open mouth. A handful of singed hair hung down from the left temple over her cheek, dangling in her mouth. Her eyelids were drawn up, showing black holes where the eyes had been burned out. … She had probably looked square into the flash and gotten her eyeballs burned (Rosenberg).
Numerous secondary fires erupted throughout the entire city. The fires were nearly impossible to put out due to the break of water lines (DOE). The devastation was incredible.
The effects of these two bombings were absolutely devastating. They left Japan emotionally destroyed. America, within the course of three days, had left Japan completely dumbfounded and awestruck. The bombing of Hiroshima instantly killed sixty-six thousand to sixty-nine thousand people. One hundred thousand more died by 1945. And by 1950, over two hundred thousand had died from various lingering effects (“Dimensions”). Everything up to one mile from the target was completely destroyed with the exception of certain concrete structures made to withstand a blast. Everything was flattened and desolate. It looked like a wasteland (Purohit).
The effects of the Nagasaki bombing were not as severe as Hiroshima, even though the bomb was more powerful and bigger. This is mainly because Nagasaki is located in a mountainous area (Avalon). But even with the mountains acting as barriers, the bombing of Nagasaki took a substantial toll on Japanese citizens. Forty-two thousand citizens were instantly killed, and forty thousand were severely injured. The bomb completely destroyed thirty-nine percent of the buildings in Nagasaki.
Both cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, suffered many strange and sometimes unexpected diseases and symptoms after the bombings. Survivors developed symptoms such as blood cell abnormalities, high fevers, chronic fatigue, diarrhea, vomiting, hair loss, and extreme depression. All people after the bombing were more prone to infection and cancer. Three years following the radiation exposure leukemia rates peaked. The exact amount of casualties is unknown, but many continued to perish up to ten years after the detonation of the atomic bomb (Anhalt)!
In addition to the immediate and long-term diseases and injuries of the Japanese people who were struck by the bomb was also an immense amount of emotional damage and sheer terror. The bombings struck an intense fear into all the citizens witnessing the event. Many citizens ran away and hid for long periods of time due to the hysteria the bombing forced into their lives. Before the atomic bombings people would pay no attention to a single plane, but after the nuclear bombing seeing a single plane would put more fear into Japanese citizens than seeing a mass of planes. This terror would never cease to exist (Avalon). It undoubtedly shaped the way mankind sees warfare.
Arguably the biggest deal concerning the bomb was the effect it had on the ongoing world war. The atomic bombing of Japan undoubtedly ended World War 2. Japan surrendered after seeing the massive amount of damage and casualties of their own land and people. Japan offered their surrender on August 10, 1945. The only condition was the emperor be allowed to remain the nominal head of state. America accepted the conditions of their surrender, but said the emperor could only remain for ceremonial purposes. Japan was not happy and delayed their response. During this delay America continued conventional raids, which killed thousands of more Japanese people. Finally the emperor remarked, “I can not endure the thought of letting my people suffer any longer.” On August 15, the emperor announced his plan to surrender. It took a few weeks but finally on September 2, 1945, the official ceremony of surrender took place and the war was over (DOE).
Countries continue to develop different weapons and methods to gain fear from other nations. The atomic bomb may have been one of the biggest discoveries ever made. The invention of this nuclear weapon has changed the way nations look at warfare and political matters. The Manhattan Project, the atomic bombing of Japan, and the aftermath of the bomb were pivotal moments in world events.
Newspaper headlines and documentaries have recently exposed the horrors and corruptions within the food industry. Most people today have a basic idea of what goes on behind closed doors in the food industry; few know exactly what happens. This day and hour, animals are being produced, transported, and slaughtered in larger quantities than ever before. This high demand creates a need for efficiency and quickness resulting in unfair and inhumane treatment for commercial purposes.
Factory farming, according to the ASPCA, is “a large-scale industrial operation that houses hundreds or thousands of food animals in extremely restricted conditions and treats them as non-sentient economic commodities.” The mistreatment begins in the process of raising the animals. Factory farms begin with force breeding, in which animals are made to reproduce at unnaturally accelerated rates. This causes the animals to become exhausted and stressed, putting their immune systems at higher risk for disease. Because all of the animals resulting from force breeding need to be stored, the unnatural overpopulation causes them to be cramped into small areas. They have no room to move, causing animals to get trampled to death or badly injured. The lack of space makes ventilation sparse and disease easily spreadable. To control the diseases among animals, the farm workers consistently feed them normally unnecessary antibiotics and hormones. In addition, these antibiotics are used to kill intestinal bacteria, stimulating growth to speed up production along with the hormones with which they’re injected.
The abuse is far from over with the raising of the animals. When the farm workers transfer the animals to the slaughterhouse, they still do not treat the animals as if their treatment could inflict pain. As animals are transferred, they are crammed into trailers, mostly in harsh temperatures. As cold weather worsens, animals start to freeze to the sides of the trailers. The skin of the pigs or cows sticks to the side, and when they are roughly being pulled off to enter the slaughterhouse, their skin remains on the trailer. Many who got sick or injured along the way are forced from the trailers with a bulldozer and piled with the other dead animals, waiting to join them in death. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says each year about ten percent or nine hundred million animals never reach the slaughterhouse.
After arriving from the farms, the animals are put in line to be slaughtered. Federal law requires animals be unconscious during processing, but unfortunately, that is not always the case. The majority of slaughterhouses use electrical wands or what the industry calls a “captive bolt” to make the animals unconscious, but these are not always effective. An account from a worker of a factory farm recounts, “To get done with them faster, we’d put eight or nine of them in the knocking box at a time. You start shooting, the calves are jumping, and they’re all piling up on top of each other. You don’t know which ones got shot and which didn’t. They’re hung anyway and down the line they go, wriggling and yelling, to be slaughtered, fully conscious.” Even with this requirement, some observations tell us thirty percent of animals being processed are still conscious while they go through the assembly line. One worker confessed, “A lot of times the skinner finds a cow is still conscious when he slices the side of his head and the cow starts kicking wildly. If that happens, the skinner shoves a knife into the back of its head to cut the spinal cord. This only paralyzes them, it doesn’t stop the pain.” The blame for this is put on faulty equipment or improper training of the workers. The U.S. Department of Agriculture conducted a survey among all United State slaughtering houses, showing barely thirty-six percent were using “acceptable” slaughtering techniques.
The inhumane act of slaughtering does not only affect the animals, it takes a toll on the workers emotionally and physically as well. A worker shares his experience with working in a slaughterhouse: “I’ve taken my job pressure and frustration out on the animals, my wife and on myself with heavy drinking. With an animal that makes you angry, you don’t just kill it. You blow the windpipe; make it drown in its own blood, spit in its nose. I would cut its eye out and the hog would just scream. One time I sliced off the end of a hog’s nose. The hog went crazy, so I took a handful of salt brine and ground it into its nose. Now that hog really went nuts….” Not only emotionally, the lack of training the staff has acquired can stay with them the rest of their lives. With bloody floors, sharp instruments, and thrashing animals surrounding, it’s easy to slip and injure yourself. Without closely paying attention, the heavy machinery could cause major injury. A worker testifies his observations: “The conditions are very dangerous and workers aren’t well trained for machinery. One machine has a whirring blade that catches people in it. One woman’s breast got caught in it and it was torn off. Another’s shirt got caught and her face was dragged into it.” Those disabled by machines and complain of the dangers are almost always replaced.
Those in the field of animal processing are not the only people affected by this way of producing. The consumers eating these meats produced by factory farms are also harmed. The antibiotics and hormones animals are required to eat because of the conditions they live in have harmful effects in humans who consume them. The animals are fed these antibiotics all of their lives, and they become part of their body. When we eat them, we also get the antibiotics and hormones they were given. Consuming these can create a long-term problem with our own health. The overdose of antibiotics can build up in our system, creating immunity from medicines used to fight certain strains of bacteria and illnesses. Overdoses in hormones also affect us negatively. Too much of a hormone can create growth problems in humans, just as it would make an animal grow unnaturally. Within the food we eat are also defects as a result of factory farming and inhumane slaughter. The food product from mass producing farms such as meat, eggs, and dairy products suffers in nutrition. Using improper slaughtering techniques results in blood-spattered meat only acceptable for low-grade meat products, such as hamburgers. As for eggs and dairy products, the force breeding and being injected with hormones to speed up the production affects the quality of the product. There are not as many health benefits and nutrition as a natural, healthy process would produce.
Yet another way factory farming affects the world around us is environmentally. When hundreds of animals are confined to one area, the surrounding land is harmed. So many animals create much more waste than land can support, as well as putting chemicals in the air through processing. This pollutes our soil, air, and water quality. The excessive amount of waste is stored in waste lagoons, which often leak, admitting the manure into our ground and waterways, adding bacteria. Side effects from this can result in Blue Infant Syndrome and other diseases. The manure is also taken by companies to spray as fertilizer, releasing chemicals into the air we breathe and a gas dangerous to those in close proximity to a large amount called hydrogen sulfide. Side effects range from sore throat to seizures and death.
In an attempt to stop this inhumane slaughtering, Congress recognized the Humane Methods of Animal Slaughter Act on August 27, 1958: “Congress finds the use of humane methods in the slaughter of livestock to prevent needless suffering; resulting in safer and better working conditions for persons engaged in the slaughtering industry; brings about improvement of products and economies in slaughtering operations; and produces other benefits for producers, processors and consumers which tend to expedite an orderly flow of livestock and livestock products in the interstate and foreign commerce. It is therefore declared to be the policy of the United States that the slaughter shall be carried out only by humane methods.” Though this held up while the demand for food was in smaller quantities, as it grew so did the inhumane treatment of animals. This created the need for President Bush to sign into law the “Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002.” This includes a resolution the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act of 1958 be fully reinforced to prevent this needless suffering of animals. It also requires the Secretary of Agriculture to track volitions and report them to Congress annually. This poses the question: if these requirements are laws to be reported annually, why has factory farming continued to be a problem? According to Arthur Hughes, Vice-Chairmen of the National Council of Food Inspection, the new federal regulations have given slaughterhouses more responsibility to comply with plant operation, but requirements have left them powerless to enforce them. He explains in an interview, “Drastic increases in production speeds, lack of support from supervisors in plants, new inspection policies which significantly reduce our enforcement authority, and little or no access to the areas of the plants where animals are killed, have significantly hampered our ability to ensure compliance with humane regulations.”
With all of the problems of factory farming evident above, the question comes to mind, “what can be done to change this?” Simply stepping up for the rights of animals made clear in the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act can change the way these factories are run. In 1999, McDonald’s and other fast food companies received word of what was happening inside these slaughtering houses. McDonald’s showed up to investigate if the safety concerns were true. They then set up newer guidelines for workers to follow, but nothing more. Ways to ensure you are not supporting this horrific issue is by buying products marked as organic or free range. They both mean cows, chickens, and pigs have not eaten pesticides and are not being raised in factory farms. This not only does not feed the fast food business money and encourage them to keep producing, but it also supports local farmers. Another thing to look into is http://www.localharvest.org/, a Web site that allows you to find local farms near you and regularly order fresh produce and other foods with a good cause.
Works Referenced
Bonné, Jon. “Can the Animals You Eat Be Treated Humanely?” Msnbc.com Web. 14 December 2011.
Farm Sanctuary. Farmsanctuary.org. Web. 14 December 2011.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA): The Animal Rights Organization. PETA.org. Web. 14 December 2011.
U.S. Food and Drug Administration Home Page. Web. 14 December 2011.
In the book Hitler’s Willing Executioner’s, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen talks about how the German people under the Nazi regime were all willing to help Hitler commit his crimes against humanity. It is important, however, to acknowledge the fact there were Germans who disagreed with Hitler and who protested his policies. These people cannot be forgotten; they stood in the face of evil and defied it. These groups carried some of the most brilliant minds of the twentieth century from Sophie Scholl to one of the most famous theologians, Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Some of these groups were non-violent, such as the White Rose society, who simply protested Hitler’s policies through writing. Other groups such as the Valkyrie plot and the Abwehr plot tried to eliminate Hitler and replace his government. Both violent and non-violent German resistance to Hitler under the Nazi regime was effective in discrediting and weakening the Nazi government.
The German resistance to Hitler was not made up of one organization. The resistance was made by many different efforts, and it manifested itself in many different ways. The first real resistance to Hitler came before he even got power. The first people to protest Hitler were the communists and socialists; during Hitler’s campaign for election, they protested against Hitler. After he took power, these communists and socialists helped Jews and political prisoners escape to friendly countries. When war broke out with Russia, they helped the invading Russian army with food, money, supplies, and information.
The communists and socialists never united into one single movement; they were rather scattered efforts throughout Germany. Three other major united movements or groups within Germany, who stood against Hitler, though. The first was a non-violent group known as the White Rose Society. The White Rose Society was established in 1942 at the University of Munich. It was founded by three students: Christoph Probst, Hans Scholl, and Sophie Scholl. These students did not lead any coup attempts or try to start a civil war. These students simply spoke about living in an inhumane society.
Hans and Sophie Scholl both originally supported the Nazi government. They were both proud members of the Hitler youth. Their parents were never supportive of the Nazi’s, however. Hans’s and Sophie’s view began to radically change when the Nazis started to invade other countries. Though their views changed in the 1930s, they didn’t start writing until 1942. This is when they began to write about the “Enslavement” of the German people under the Nazis.
In the summer of 1942, the White Rose Society started writing their first leaflets. The leaflets were entitled “Leaflets of the White Rose.” The first leaflet was dropped in the fall of 1942. It started some real disorder in Germany. People began printing copies and distributing them to other cities. The writings impacted some students in Hamburg so much they started their own “White Rose Society.” In Munich, anti-Nazi graffiti began to spread rapidly. The leaflets were even given to U.S. soldiers before they invaded North Africa. In the winter of 1943, the publications had to stop because Hans and Christoph were both sent to fight on the Eastern Front against the Russians. Once they returned in February, they started work on a second pack of leaflets entitled the “The Leaflets of Resistance.” Only two of these were published, however, before they were all arrested on February, 18, 1943. On February 22, their trial began. The three founding members stood bravely, but on February 23, all three were beheaded.
Hans Scholl, Christoph Probst, and Sophie Scholl served as martyrs for the academic community who stood against Hitler. Unfortunately, the Hamburg branch of the White Rose Society was also caught and many were sentenced to death. These examples served to inspire others to speak out against Hitler. This is the most well-known non-violent resistance to Hitler. There were many coup attempts on Hitler. Some of these attempts were non-violent; they simply wanted to overthrow Hitler, with no blood shed. Others were full-on assassination plots. These coup attempts came from many different places within German society. The most famous ones and the ones that almost worked, though, came from inside Hitler’s own military.
General Ludwig Beck was the Chief of General Staff of the German army. When Hitler announced Germany was going to invade the ethnically German parts of Austria, Beck was outraged. Beck said he would refuse to carry through any order pertaining to the invasion of Austria. Beck did not have to carry through any orders to invade Austria. Austria was annexed as part of Germany and did not put up any fight. In 1938, Hitler announced plans to invade the ethnically German part of Czechoslovakia. General Beck had a major problem with killing any Germans, even it was just through ethnicity. Beck again protested, suggesting all generals of the German army should resign because it would be a crime to kill other Germans.
He sent the following letter to his fellow generals: “The very existence of the nation is at stake. History will attribute a blood-guilt to leaders that do not act in accordance with their professional expertise and political conscience. Your military duty to obey [orders] ends where your knowledge, your conscience and your responsibility forbids the execution of an order. If in such a situation, your advice and warnings are ignored, then it is your right and your duty before the Nation and History to resign from your positions” (Schrader, “The First Coup”).
This failed not because other generals didn’t agree with him, but because they were afraid of what might happen to them. Beck resigned his post, but Franz Halder agreed with Beck. Franz Halder and General Hans Oster, head of counter intelligence, made a plan to arrest Hitler. They made a plan down to the tee to execute if Hitler ordered the invasion of Czechoslovakia. Unfortunately, the English and the French signed away Czechoslovakia, and there was no fight over it. So the generals could never carry out their plans, because there was no invasion.
After the first unsuccessful coup attempt, Hitler began to conquer all of Europe. By 1941, Hitler had conquered from the Arctic Circle to the Mediterranean Sea. Among the German public he was very popular. Hitler began to lose popularity in December of 1941, when he tried to invade Russia. Now Generals Beck, Olbricht, and Bussche began to make a plan to overthrow the Nazi regime. They were just waiting for Hitler to get more unpopular. General Olbricht wrote a plan in case of an uprising known as plan “Valkyrie.” Valkyrie detailed the set-up of a new government in the case of Hitler’s death or a rebellion. The plan was constructed so when Hitler was killed the Nazi regime would be taken out. In 1943, Oster and Tresckow joined the plot. In the summer of that year, Tresckow obtained plastic explosives from the English and placed it on Hitler’s plane. This attempt did not succeed. The bomb didn’t go off.
There were many other assassination attempts. One included all the conspirators shooting Hitler at lunch, but many objected saying it wasn’t honorable. They agreed on one plan in July of 1944. The plan was to have Colonel Claus Von Stauffenberg plant a bomb in one of Hitler’s meetings. This was the best option so that way the bomb wouldn’t just kill Hitler, it would kill his advisers as well. The plan was originally set for July 12, but it was delayed because Hitler’s right-hand man wasn’t present.
On July 15, however, Von Stauffenberg asked for permission to carry out the plan and plant the bomb. Olbricht could no longer wait and gave the order to go ahead and plant the bomb. The bomb went off but did not kill Hitler; the bomb was behind a leg of the oak table. Hitler’s life would have ended if the bomb was just half a foot to the right or left. They still tried to carry out plan Valkyrie. It didn’t work. The Nazis quickly stopped the plan. All the conspirators were caught; most were shot on sight.
The next attempt on Hitler’s life was led by one of the most famous theologians of the 20th century, Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Dietrich Bonhoeffer mixed the two types of resistance: at the beginning of the Nazi rule over Germany, he was passive. He simply was protecting the church; once the war started happening, Bonhoeffer realized violent action was necessary. He decided Hitler must be killed.
Dietrich Bonheoffer was born February 4, 1906. He was homeschooled in his early years. Bonheoffer graduated from Union Seminary in New York in 1930. In 1931, he began teaching at the theological faculty in Berlin. In 1933, Hitler’s rise to power sparked much debate within the German protestant church. There was a debate if they should let “non-Aryans” serve as pastors. Bonhoeffer was opposed to this idea of the Church putting a race restriction on pastors. Bonhoeffer was getting worried the Nazi regime was starting to take too much power in the church. Bonhoeffer formed his own church, called the confessing church. The Nazis were infuriated by Bonhoeffer’s teaching, and they outlawed his church. The fact the Nazis outlawed it did not make a huge impact, however; Bonheoffer still had an underground seminary for his church.
In 1939, Dietrich Bonhoeffer decided to join the “Abwehr” plot to kill Hitler. He continued on with the church until he was arrested in April 1943, after it was discovered he had given money to help Jews escape to Switzerland. The Abwehr plot still carried on, though, and on July 20, 1944, five days after the Valkyrie plot, the Abwehr plot tried to kill Hitler but failed. It was discovered Bonhoeffer was part of this plot. He was then sentenced to death and was executed in April 1945.
All of these groups showed great courage in the face of evil. They all stood up for what they believed was right and paid for it. It is important to recognize not all Germans supported the Nazis; some fought and gave their lives trying to defeat the Nazis. Others simply spoke the truth. In the end, all these groups succeeded in making the Nazi regime less powerful. They made other Germans realize what a twisted organization the Nazis were.
Bibliography
Barnett, Victoria. “Dietrich Bonhoeffer.” Ushmm.org. 1st ed. National Holocaust Memorial Museum, 2009. Web. 10 October 2010.
The following is the mildly-edited final document I wrote for my Master’s Thesis. It has only been edited to keep the focus on the content, eliminating the extraneous elements required concerning the process of writing the work itself. Part Two and the conclusion will be printed in the forthcoming issue. (Unexpurgated copies are available on request for a small nominal stipend or honorarium, whichever you prefer.)
Introduction
The ancient epics of Greece are foundational to Western Civilization’s literary heritage. From the poets collectively known as “Homer,” operating in an oral culture, come the Iliad and the Odyssey, two contrasting yet connected examples that set the standard for the Western epic. After the exploits of Achilles and Odysseus, other stories and heroes come from a variety of cultures, crafted in new ways representing different values and ideals, each new epic and poet/author remaking and expanding the epic genre itself. Peter Toohey, author of Reading Epic: An Introduction to the Ancient Narratives, declares the ancient world knew several different kinds of epics: mythological, miniature, chronicle, commentary, didactic, and comic are examples of the diverse sub-genres of the epic (2-6). With such variety in authors, cultural background, purpose, and content, it is perhaps impossible to define “the epic” in any satisfactory manner that will account for so many differences. Thus, in order to make this present examination manageable, I focus solely on the two epic poems of Greece, the Iliad and the Odyssey, as the pattern of the epic of Western Civilization refashioned by Babylon 5.
Before examining the texts of the Iliad, Odyssey, and Babylon 5, some initial, albeit broad, definitions of what constitutes the Western epic will help introduce the specific genre of narrative discussed throughout this paper. Charles Rowan Beye, author of Ancient Epic Poetry, a work surveying the genre, provides a valuable historical perspective on the beginnings of the Western epic:
The term epic has come a long way from its origins as the Greek word epos, from the verb eipein, “to utter,” “to sing,” thus, the utterance of the song. Over time, a professional guild of singers cooperated in the evolution of the Iliad and the Odyssey narratives as well as in a host of others now lost to us. The Greeks understood the epic to be a genre of long narratives in dactylic hexameter telling stories that encompassed many peoples, many places with sufficient detail and dialogue to give depth, psychological complexity, and, most important, a historical context. These epic poems contained their history, the history of peoples, the history of the world (284, emphasis in original).
Emphasizing the oral origin of the epic, Beye’s definition begins this understanding of epic as a sensory enterprise: epic was not originally a reading experience but an aural experience for the audience, which Babylon 5, as a television program, similarly provides, while adding a more precise visual component. More significantly, Beye indicates the Western epic is a substantial work that contains “depth, psychological complexity, and … a historical context.” To these essential components Toohey adds that it “concentrates either on the fortunes of a great hero or perhaps a great civilization and the interactions of this hero and his civilization with the gods” (1). Thus the context of the Homeric epics concerns not only the human element of the heroes involved, but also humanity’s interaction with something transcendent: fate, destiny, the divine, and the importance of understanding oneself and one’s place in the universe.
These definitions, taken together, provide a meaningful conception of the major components of the Western epic: 1) a lengthy narrative with a definite structure and shape; 2) a defined central hero surrounded by and relating to other significant, defined characters; 3) a plot of historical significance for the characters and their world; and 4) a thematic element of how the characters come to a better, transcendent understanding of themselves, reality, and their connection to society. The Iliad, Odyssey, and Babylon 5 all utilize these basic epic elements (and more). My purpose, however, is not simply to highlight elements of Babylon 5 as if it is an allegory of the Homeric epics, such as declaring “this character is like Achilles,” or “these episodes resemble a journey like the Odyssey.” The similarities presented are not allegorical but instead serve as examples of Babylon 5’s utilization and reinvention of the various components of the Western ancient epic genre.
In demonstrating the epic natures of the Iliad, Odyssey, and Babylon 5, this thesis utilizes formalist criticism and historical analysis. Through these two analytical tools, I examine the texts of the poems and the episodes of Babylon 5, aided extensively by secondary sources. The Homeric epics have a long history of analysis, though much has focused on their authorship and construction as oral narratives. As that is extraneous to this present examination, I rely predominantly on the content-based historical analyses of the authors who helped define the epic above, Toohey and Beye. Additionally, informing much of my understanding of the structure of epic poetry used throughout the first part of this paper are the narrative composition ideas from Cedric Whitman and the archetypal journey insights from Joseph Campbell.
Drawing upon extensive research (his single-spaced bibliography is twelve pages long), Toohey’s Reading Epic provides an introductory chapter about the general content and style of what constitutes the ancient epic, in addition to the aforementioned history of the epic as a literary genre. Its pertinence and utility are apparent. His emphasis on the heroic code, additionally, which contrasts Achilles and Odysseus as different kinds of heroes, provides several helpful insights for this investigation. Toohey’s knowledge of and extensive research on the subject is clear throughout his work.
Beye’s Ancient Epic Poetry is even more beneficial for my particular focus on the constituent elements of the epic. Offering a more recent work (2006) than Toohey’s (1992), Beye’s commentary provides several useful ideas about Achilles and Odysseus as epic heroes, in addition to the heroic code highlighted by Toohey. Unlike Toohey’s simple bibliographic list, Beye offers a narrative history of Homeric and other ancient epic scholarship. He discusses the aforementioned dominant topic of composition in the field of ancient epic scholarship, citing landmark critics Friedrich August Wolf, Milman Parry, and C.M. Bowra (among several others). Beye laments the dearth of scholarship on the Argonautica and Gilgamesh, though his revised 2006 edition addresses some of the advancements made since his first edition in 1993. His motivation in including commentary on the Argonautica and Gilgamesh, as rectifications of previously-ignored important works, mirrors the motivation of this present inquiry in analyzing Babylon 5 as a serious literary text in the media of televised science-fiction and contemporary epics.
Supplementing the major ideas of Toohey and Beye, the earlier Homeric scholarship of Cedric Whitman provides additional criticism. His Homer and the Heroic Tradition supplies most of the ideas about the dominant structure of the ancient epic, though his focus is admittedly on the Iliad. Like Toohey and Beye, Whitman is clearly fluent in Homeric scholarship. His work is a frequently-cited landmark in the field, though I concentrate primarily on his poetic structure commentary here. Further implementation of his work would only benefit any examination of the epic genre.
Joseph Campbell’s The Hero with a Thousand Faces is cited heavily concerning the archetypal epic journey used throughout the chapters on the Odyssey and Babylon 5. Campbell’s theories are based in part on the archetypal criticism of Carl Jung, for whom the archetype was a fluid exploration of the “collective unconscious” of a people. Jung’s notions about archetypes as processes are quite fitting not only for Campbell’s epic hero journey pattern but also for Babylon 5 as a whole, whose primary heroes embark on archetypal journeys. Like Whitman, Campbell offers more insight into the epic genre than can be adequately incorporated here, so the focus is intentionally limited.
Other critics cited throughout this thesis such as noted scholars Gilbert Murray, Northrop Frye, and Peter J. Leithart of New Saint Andrews College supply additional helpful ideas, though not to the extent of Toohey, Beye, Whitman and Campbell.
Much of the research cited throughout this work comes from easily accessible sources to the lay reader (Beye makes a similar point in his annotated bibliography). Secondary sources used to supplement the formalist analysis of the individual episodes of Babylon 5 come predominantly from recent interviews and bonus features on the dvd releases of the individual seasons of the series. As the creator of the series, J. Michael Straczynski offers pertinent insight into the television show, its structure, and its message. With the exception of rare, out of print magazine articles and Internet websites (such as “The Lurker’s Guide to Babylon 5,” which provides episode analyses, Straczynski’s commentary, and interaction with the series’ fans), few secondary sources exist analyzing Babylon 5 as a serious, significant literary artifact, which has in part inspired this investigation. The recent interviews of the series’ creative team and cast, from the dvd releases, provide interesting (albeit biased) ideas for this thesis, supplementing analysis of the specific episodes themselves. Other important reference works not cited below include David Bassom’s behind the scenes books such as Creating Babylon 5 and The A-Z of Babylon 5 and Jane Killick’s episode guides, one for each of the five seasons. Their interviews with cast and crew members provide similar backgrounds to the show, but as they are not pertinent to Babylon 5 as a rebirth of the ancient epic, they are acknowledged here only in passing. (Editor’s note: though the original bibliographic information came at the conclusion of the entire work, the works cited throughout part one will be listed at the close of this issue.)
While the Homeric poems themselves are unquestionably worthwhile for any literary analysis, and have been for thousands of years, some critics may question the serious value in attempting to elevate a television show to their status. My thesis posits an affirmative response that it is. Babylon 5 reforms the Homeric epic in style and content, and there is great value in analyzing and understanding it. Babylon 5 gives witness that the influence of the Western ancient epic genre still exists, that the elements that created the ancient epic still resonate in new cultures, new settings, and new media. Their similar hopeful messages of the importance of life given by the responsibility to live well and make wise choices apply to all cultures and all times. The human condition, mankind’s struggle to find a place in the universe despite mortality, resonates as strongly in Homer’s epic past as it does in Babylon 5’s epic future.
Part one of this thesis examines the various contributions of the Iliad and Odyssey to my initial four-part definition of the ancient epic. I do not spend time arguing about the identity of “Homer,” but rather accept the content of the poems as available to the lay reader today through translations. The differences in transmission between an oral culture and the audio-visual medium of television are so apparent that they would distract from the content-driven emphasis of this present work. Chapter one defines the epic elements specific to the Iliad, while chapter two focuses on the Odyssey.
Part two of this work analyzes Babylon 5, how it utilizes the foundational epic components listed above, as well as how it modifies those elements in the ever-changing (yet stable) epic form. Babylon 5 is the major emphasis of this paper, as I seek to contribute to the nascent body of serious criticism on science fiction as a meaningful genre. Part two, likewise, has two chapters. Chapter three addresses the characters: first the two main epic heroes, Commander Jeffrey Sinclair and Captain John Sheridan; and second, alien ambassadors Londo Mollari and G’Kar as different kinds of characters distinct from Babylon 5’s epic heroes. Chapter four addresses the remaining three elements by which I define the Western ancient epic. First are the series’ structure and shape and its plot of historical significance. The grand scale of the program, combined with several layers of internal and external conflicts, makes the show very complicated but cohesive, much like the structured ancient poems. Babylon 5’s dominant transcendent themes of accurate self-understanding and finding one’s place in the universe culminate this exploration of the series as a refashioning of the Western epic genre in a new medium.
Finally, the conclusion focuses on how the fundamental message of hope permeating Babylon 5 at once connects it to the human, mortal core of the Iliad and the Odyssey and also offers a relevant message for all audiences: that life is meaningful and worth fighting for, even with all its flaws and brevity. Babylon 5, like the Homeric epics, engages the audience in the importance of making choices and facing the consequences of those choices with responsibility. Only through accurate self-understanding and a proper knowledge of the nature of reality and one’s place in it can bring a right perspective on the importance and value of all life. In this way Babylon 5 transcends its Western epic foundation and transforms the genre into what its original epic heroes wanted but were denied: the ability to shape one’s own life through free choices.
Part One: The Western Ancient Epic
Chapter One – The Iliad
Structure and Shape
The unifying narrative structure throughout the Iliad is a device interchangeably called “ring composition” by some critics and “chiastic arrangement” (after the Greek letter χ, the chi) by others. The narrative that employs ring composition comes “full circle” in the sense that its end was sufficiently foreshadowed by the beginning of the tale, which essentially returns to the point at which it began. The necessities of plot, even for an epic tale, demand progress and movement, so the nature of the return or completion is sometimes more symbolic than literal, but this does not detract from the efficacy of this narrative technique. This pattern pervades the Iliad in each facet of its structure, from the overarching schema of the entire work to the order of scenes within individual books.
Peter Leithart provides the following diagram, which summarizes many of Cedric Whitman’s ideas about the arrangement of the Iliad:
According to Leithart’s diagram, the poem clearly ends in a similar place to where it began: a Trojan requesting a child from an Achaean. The plot requires the particulars of each request to be different, but the formal structure of the poem is a unifying ring. The cleverness of such a device allows the necessary progression of plot and character movement (even if only internally) while still providing the appearance of similarity in shape and content. Such parallel events bring familiarity and the sense of completeness without the banality of exact repetition. It is this creative structure that gives form to the Western epic genre.
Ring composition guides the progression of time in the Iliad in addition to the direction of its overall plot. Whitman provides a similar diagram delineating the chronology of the poem. The shape of these diagrams resembles an “x” or the Greek χ, hence the term “chiastic” structure.
Again, though the plot content is not precisely identical, the ring similarity concerning the chronological length of the mirrored episodes is remarkably consistent. The length of the mirrored episodes in its written form does not need to be identical — such a limitation would unnecessarily hamper the poem. The key is the mirrored/ring nature of the time as well as the plot itself, which Whitman sufficiently proves.
But ring composition does not just inform the overarching structure of the Iliad. It can also be seen in smaller sections within the poem. Book five, relating Diomedes’s mighty battle exploits while Achilles is away from combat, similarly depicts such a pattern in another diagram from Whitman:
Whitman further explains that book five, “[l]ike so many parts of the Homeric narrative, falls into four primary phases, each developed with smaller episodes, and these lie symmetrically on either side of the brief meeting of the hero with Apollo” (266). That Diomedes’s key scene in the poem revolves around his interaction with one of his gods foreshadows here the key epic theme of interacting with some transcendent element of the universe, but since he confronts the gods with physical force and not transcendent understanding, he gains only a temporary (and ultimately inconsequential) victory. This example, as Whitman says, is one of many throughout the poem and thus serves to illustrate clearly that the Iliad uses ring composition or chiastic structure from its overarching plot and time to its individual scenes or episodes.
Ring composition, then, is a fundamental component of what constitutes the Western ancient epic genre. As the first example of this genre, the Iliad’s guiding structure and shape set the pattern for the narrative structure Western epics use to tell their tales, whether as a unifying device or simply in discrete episodes. Regardless of whether the Iliad is a series of stitched-together, disparate tales from an oral composition heritage, the extant poem we have now called the Iliad, as demonstrated by Leithart and Whitman, employs such a narrative structure. Now, the Iliad is a cohesive tale bound together through ring composition, the narrative base for the Western epic. Each epic poem is different and contributes unique variations to the genre, and not all epics utilize ring composition to the extent the Iliad does. Even so, the Iliad, the Odyssey, and Babylon 5, as examples of the Western epic genre, all employ this key narrative structure.
A Central Hero amid Others
Without question, the central hero of the Iliad is Western literature’s first and (perhaps) greatest hero: swift-footed Achilles. Despite his lengthy disappearance in the middle of his poem, the Iliad is Achilles’s story, a story Richmond Lattimore considers a tragedy, which is an unusual thought, considering Achilles survives the Iliad, and his actions in slaying Hector portend the downfall of Troy. Harold Bloom agrees with Lattimore adding that while Achilles “retains the foremost place, [he] cannot overcome the bitterness of his sense of his own mortality. To be only half a god appears to be Homer’s implicit definition of what makes a hero tragic” (70). Son of the human Peleus and the divine water nymph Thetis, Achilles believes at the outset of the Iliad he has inherited only the worst trait from his heritage: mortality. The Homeric Achilles has no invulnerability, and he knows it only too well.
Achilles is continually reminded of his mortality throughout his poem, most notably when his dear friend and kinsman Patroclus is killed by Hector. This sudden loss forces Achilles to seriously ponder his own mortality, especially since Patroclus was acting as Achilles’s proxy on the battlefield — even wearing Achilles’s armor — at Achilles’s insistence. Two other essential scenes, Agamemnon’s envoy to Achilles in book nine and Priam’s plea for Hector’s corpse in book twenty-four, include appeals to Achilles’s mortal father to guide his actions. The envoy and loss of Patroclus contribute to what Bloom calls “the bitterness of [Achilles’s] sense of his own mortality.” By the time of the climactic confrontation with Priam, Achilles is no longer bitter over his mortality. Achilles’s struggle with his mortality, his place and purpose in the universe, his relation to fate and the gods is a significant theme of the Iliad and will be addressed below. Suffice it to say here, the majority of Achilles’s story is a tragedy because of his struggle with mortality and, though he makes peace with it (and Priam) by the end, he knows he will soon die. Yet it is not only his pressing mortality that makes Achilles a tragic hero.
Achilles, as a hero and a mortal, makes free will choices and decisions (though without the ability to shape his destiny). Achilles has a tragic flaw (which Lattimore considers noble), part pride, part occasional subservience to anger, and yet this flaw does not negate Achilles’s freedom to make choices. These choices lead to disaster, culminating in the loss of Patroclus, and this, too, contributes to Achilles’s tragic nature.
Achilles, though, within the confines of the Iliad at least (if not the portentous nature of its tragedy), partly overcomes his own tragedy through the sheer greatness of his personality. Superficially, Gilbert Murray sees him as “young, swift, tall, and beautiful” (206), and though his physical attributes help distinguish him from his fighting comrades (Odysseus’s shortness is frequently mentioned, for instance), there is certainly more to him than that. Lattimore adds that Achilles “is a man of culture and intelligence; he knows how to respect heralds, how to entertain estranged friends. He presides over [Patroclus’s funeral] games with extraordinary courtesy and tact. He is not only a great fighter but a great gentleman” (49). Perhaps, then, Achilles did inherit some positive mortal attributes. Certainly the gods of the Iliad are not characterized by “extraordinary courtesy and tact,” even in their best moments. Even Thetis herself seems only interested in effecting glory and a kind of justice for her son (though some might argue she is being a good mother, her willingness to sacrifice many of her son’s compatriots as attrition for her son’s justice exceeds proper motherly behavior). True, Achilles is not always characterized by “extraordinary courtesy and tact,” but the battlefield is certainly not the place for that. When Agamemnon arbitrarily steals from Achilles and disparages his honor in front of all his fighting peers, Achilles prepares to commit regicide. Since Agamemnon unjustly sullies his honor in a culture that values honor so highly, Achilles may well be within his rights to kill him. Athena intervenes — not because killing Agamemnon is wrong, but because patience will be more beneficial to Achilles later. That he freely yields to Athena (if only for the promise of future gain) exemplifies both his ability to make choices and his heroic connection to the transcendent gods of his universe. As Lattimore describes, Achilles’s “tragedy is an effect of free choice by a will that falls short of omniscience and is disturbed by anger … and his character can be invaded by the human emotions of grief, fear, … and, above all, anger” (47, 48). His anger is thus an essential component of his character and his function as a tragic hero.
The poem wastes no time in bringing up Achilles’s anger: it is the first word in the Greek text. The Iliad is the story of Achilles’s anger: what causes it, what happens because of it, and how it is satisfied and released. His anger “is the anger of pride,” says Lattimore, “the necessary accompaniment of the warrior’s greatness” (48). Because he is great, not only militarily, Achilles knows when his greatness is being challenged, which Agamemnon does. His wounded pride kindles his anger and begins the epic. Though he later treats Agamemnon’s envoy cordially, even greeting them enthusiastically, his response to their entreaties is “clouded” and he “acts uncertainly” Lattimore explains (48) because he is still angry. Appealing to Achilles’s father and, hence, his mortality, does not help as his anger has not yet been satisfied. He rejects their offers and their multifaceted avenues of restoration with Agamemnon. After the death of Patroclus, Achilles transfers his anger from Agamemnon to Hector, transmuting it from a reaction to disgrace into a desire for vengeance, but not even killing Hector slates his anger. It is not until Achilles reconciles with his own mortality that the final appeal to his father by Priam moves him to dissolve his anger and return Hector to his father. Achilles’s anger — what Barry Powell specifies as “the destructive power of anger” (115) — as a unifying motif of the Iliad connects the poem’s ring composition with the nature of the epic hero. The poem opens with a king breaking fellowship with a warrior and concludes with the warrior gaining restoration with not only the king but also the kingly father whose son he brutally murders in anger. Achilles’s anger results in Patroclus’s death, but Achilles is not free from culpability because of an emotion. It is Achilles’s choice to withdraw from battle and send Patroclus out in his stead. That ability (and responsibility) to choose even in his anger also relates to the epic’s theme of the hero understanding his place in society and relationship with the gods, discussed below.
Lastly is Achilles’s motivation. More than his anger, which primarily occurs as a reaction to circumstances, and his struggle to cope with his mortality, Achilles’s fundamental goal in the Iliad explains C.M. Bowra “is not ease, but glory, and glory makes exacting demands. A man who is willing to give his life for it wins the respect of his fellows, and when he makes his last sacrifice, they honour him” (58). By choosing to stay at Troy and ending his short-lived embargo on fighting, Achilles demonstrates that he is a man of action, a warrior, and desirous of his culture’s supreme good: battlefield glory. Vengeance for Patroclus is only part of Achilles’s motivation to return. He knows he can only fully regain his sullied honor by gaining it where it is earned, in combat. He desires to reunite with his culture, as can be seen by his acting as judge and gift giver during Patroclus’s funeral games. He wants to be a part of society, knowing it will soon kill him, since he desires eternal fame, which can only be won on the battlefield. Toohey calls this yearning for glory the “heroic impulse” (9). Though he would prefer to be immortal or at least change the impetuous gods, he realizes he cannot, so he willingly chooses to regain his status and personal glory through combat. For want of glory he allows his comrades to die during his retreat. For the restoration of his eternal glory he willingly chooses the path he knows will result in his own death. Achilles cannot change the end of the heroic impulse in his culture; neither can Odysseus, who similarly follows the Homeric heroic impulse to the restoration of culture through combat. The heroes of Babylon 5 do have the ability not only to change their universe but also the heroic impulse itself. Achilles, unfortunately for him, is forced to resign himself to his mortality and the heroic impulse of his warrior culture, which he willingly embraces after all.
The greatness of Achilles as a hero and member of the warrior culture is depicted in juxtaposition with the other characters in the Iliad. Both the Achaeans and Trojans are heroic, but not to the degree of Achilles, since it is his story. His greatness is pronounced and heightened by the quality of those he overcomes, most notably Hector.
As the Trojan’s last, best hope, Hector provides the best test of Achilles’s greatness. Lattimore explains that unlike Achilles, who willingly abnegates the community of warriors and the heroic impulse for a time, Hector “fights finely from a sense of duty and a respect for the opinions of others” (47). The hero of Troy is caught up in the heroic ideal and heroic culture of combat and glory-winning, but unlike Achilles who tries not to be concerned with the opinions of others, Hector only lives and dies by others’ esteem. That attachment to others is part of his subordination to Achilles and his doom. Lattimore continues, “Some hidden weakness, not cowardice but perhaps the fear of being called a coward, prevents him from liquidating a war which he knows perfectly well is unjust. This weakness, which is not remote from his boasting, nor from his valour, is what kills him” (47). Achilles is not brought down in the Iliad by ignorance or weakness. He chooses willingly what will eventually bring him down. Hector, however, can live only as long as he is deemed valiant by those he defends.
A second major distinction between Achilles and Hector is found in Hector’s key scene of book six, in which Hector leaves the battlefield and returns behind the walls of Troy. Hector, the general by necessity not nature, is normally more comfortable here at home with his parents, wife, and child, yet this farewell scene is fraught with impatience and unease. Hector has not the time to socialize with his family, even though it is clear he would stay here if he could. Hector sacrifices his happiness for his fundamental motivation of fulfilling his duty as the personified final defense of Troy. Hector is more clearly associated with hearth and home than the battlefield, however, and his scenes in book six show this. Certainly, as Bloom notes, “we cannot visualize Achilles living a day-to-day life in a city” (69). As the embodiment of the life Achilles ultimately rejects, Hector is an essential counterpoint to the poem’s hero. Hector is recognized and beloved in the city, i.e., culture, and is fit more for the Odyssey than the Iliad. Since he is in Achilles’s poem, though, he is doomed from the start. James Redfield furthers this representational conflict: “The action of the Iliad is an enactment of the contradictions of the warrior’s role. The warrior on behalf of culture must leave culture and enter nature. In asserting the order of culture, he must deny himself a place in that order. That others may be pure, he must become impure” (91). Achilles, as untamed, uncivilized nature, is an unstoppable force on the battlefield. Hector, since he acts contrary to his true character, has no chance of victory. By itself, that gives no positive reflection on Achilles’s greatness — he is not impressive if his enemy has no chance to beat him. What makes Hector a worthy adversary is his sacrificial character. Hector’s sense of duty (even if driven by a fear of being considered a coward) overrides his desire for comfort, ease, and family living, much like Achilles’s desire for glory overrides his desire for long life and comfort. Achilles meets his inward match in Hector. Hector sacrifices his identity as a father and husband to be a general, assuming his society’s heroic impulse, though futilely. Achilles may not enjoy the heroic impulse either, but he has no satisfactory alternative like Hector does. Unfortunately for Hector, the society of the Iliad values the natural character over the character of culture. Under prepared and overmatched, Hector cannot defeat Achilles.
By conquering his Trojan counterpart, Achilles asserts both his own status as the hero of the poem and his own attributes as the desirable heroic qualities, if not the qualities that simply succeed in this incarnation of the epic heroic impulse. Achilles understands that by choosing to follow the heroic impulse again, even if he would prefer a different life, his fate is an imminent death. He accepts it and faces the consequences of his decision (though others suffer the immediate consequences in the poem itself). Hector, in his final moments with his family, likewise foresees the results of his choice to face Achilles. Unlike Achilles, Hector does not embrace the doom of Troy he presages with his death, including the heartbreaking fate of his wife and child, and tries to avoid it, failing utterly. Hampered by his need to be what others want him to be and his fear of disappointing them (and being considered a coward), Hector’s otherwise admirable self-sacrificial character comes to naught. Despite his greatness, Hector is no match for who Achilles is and what he represents, ensuring Achilles’s place as the epic hero of the Iliad.
Plot of Historical Significance
Little needs to be said here, surely, about the plot of the Iliad. Its chiastic/ring structure in the narrative construction, as well as its thematic cohesion through the rise and fall of Achilles’s anger, shows much of its content. It is possible the lay reader is more familiar with what is not in the Iliad than what is in it. The Iliad does not mention the Golden Apple and the judgment of Paris (except perhaps briefly at the beginning of book twenty-four), Tyndareus’s oath (Helen’s father) of Helen’s suitors to protect her if she is ever abducted, Agamemnon’s sacrifice of Iphigenia, Achilles’s vulnerable heel, or the wooden horse gambit used to end the war.
Essentially, the Iliad concerns only a few days of fighting highlighted by the deaths of Patroclus of the Achaeans and Hector of Troy, bookended by forty-six days (twenty-three and twenty-three) days of virtual inactivity. This occurs in the tenth year of a siege by the Achaeans on Troy, following nine years of coastal plundering, most recently the area of Chryseia. The perplexity (if not part of the beauty) of the Iliad is that its storyline does not fundamentally concern the Trojan War itself — it is more about the rise and fall of Achilles’s anger, and Achilles himself is not even terribly concerned with the war. As he makes clear in book one to Agamemnon and those listening, he has no personal stake in the Trojan War other than surviving and gaining glory and plunder. The cause behind the war, Paris’s abduction of Helen, is only briefly referenced. As a tale of war, combat dominates the middle section of the poem through several duels and large-scale melee battles, especially during Achilles’s absence. When he returns to the foreground, everything else becomes subordinate to the choices and actions of the dominant hero of the epic.
Even though he is the best warrior and the superlative hero of the poem, his own personal journey of choosing glory and accepting his fate is not as momentous a tale as the entirety of the Trojan War itself. What gives the poem historical significance, then, comes from its ancillary components: its background of large-scale conflict, the internal significance to the characters’ personal attachment to the circumstances in which they find themselves, and the poem’s thematic element dealing with the transcendent.
Michael Wood, noted British archaeologist and author, proffers the notion whether or not the Homeric story is real, evidence exists for the possibility of “a” Trojan War, if not “the” Trojan War, and that this conflict between Achaea and Ilios seems to conclude the Bronze Age and the Mycenaean Empire. More recent archaeology supports his ideas, thus his general conclusions about the aftereffects of an empire’s destruction will illuminate the historical significance of the Iliad’s background as a story of what happens/could happen when one people (try to) destroy another:
The central political organization collapses or breaks up; its central places (“capitals”) decline; public building and work ends; military organization fragments…. The traditional ruling elite, the upper class, disintegrates…. The centralised economy collapses…. There is widespread abandonment of settlements and ensuing depopulation (244).
Agamemnon’s merciless attitude (cf. book six) will not be satisfied after ten years with anything less than the destruction of Troy. Since Wood’s summary of what happens to cultures after such destruction is relevant, the Iliad has great historical significance, regardless of the poem’s historical accuracy. As a tale of the fall of a kingdom (through the destruction of Priam’s home and progeny), the Iliad concerns not only the mortality of the individual but of social institutions at large. Additionally, every level of society present in the poem takes its events seriously: this is life and death in palpable form.
The fate of so many characters in the poem is tied to the fate of Troy: once Hector falls, Troy is essentially doomed and so are its inhabitants; Achilles’s choice to stay and kill Hector seals his personal destiny; Agamemnon (as attested to throughout the Odyssey) will have an unwelcome (and brief) return to Mycenae, despite his military victory. The events of the Iliad are meaningful to all its characters, not the least of whom are the dozens of men whose rapid deaths are lamented in the several battle scenes of the poem. As warriors, their lives are given extra significance by their battlefield glory. The terse biographical sketches of so many warriors humanize the poem while simultaneously reminding the reader that the epic poem is fundamentally about humanity in all its facets — vengeance, love, strength, and sacrifice. Mortality and its significance are ever-present in the Iliad. Summarily, the disparate characters react to the grand tale of war in different ways, and each character contributes something different (even if only minutely) to the poem’s overall significance not only as a tale of war but also as a tale of individuals caught up in such a conflict, trying to understand themselves and their world.
A Theme of Transcendent Understanding
The final component of what constitutes the Western ancient epic genre is its thematic element of transcendent understanding. More than just a long, well-structured tale with a mighty hero doing mighty things that transform a culture, the epic features the essential struggle of mankind trying to understand itself, its purpose, and how to interact with the immaterial forces at work in the universe such as fate, destiny, and the divine. The Iliad focuses on how Achilles comes to understand himself, his culture, his fate, and his relation to the gods. Some comments on the Homeric gods themselves will provide a context before examining Achilles’s struggle with the reality beyond the material world.
Few critics see much good within the gods of the Greek pantheon, at best viewing them as amplified humans full of pettiness and greed. Because the sovereign deities of the Iliad universe are licentious, Beye declares they provide “no ideal to which mankind should strive” (57). It is little wonder that Homeric heroes are forced to judge the importance of their lives by tangible standards such as public renown and the amount of booty plundered in war. The gods do not genuinely care for the mortals who do virtually everything on behalf of them; not even Zeus, who supposedly operates throughout the poem for Achilles’s best interest and glory, truly cares for the people. He regrets being forced to allow Sarpedon to die, but he is only “forced” because he esteems fate more than humanity. Aphrodite saves Paris and Aeneas from death, more for her pleasure than because she truly loves them — even though Aeneas is her son. The gods are a significant component of the epic, but their ultimate importance is limited as Powell states because they “are unconstrained by the seriousness of human life … [because] their immortality cheats them of the seriousness that attends human decisions and human behavior. Our acts count because we are going to die, but the gods are free to be petty forever” (47). Powell emphasizes again the importance of free choice as a mark of quality life — the heroes of the Iliad are responsible for their actions because the gods, according to Lattimore, “do not change human nature. They manipulate [the characters], but they do not make them what they are. The choices are human; and in the end, despite all divine interferences, the Iliad is a story of people” (55). The significance of being a free mortal human manipulated by the gods is what Achilles struggles with throughout his poem.
As the central hero of the poem, Achilles’s struggle with his identity and culture is the most significant struggle of this kind. Diomedes’s encounters with the gods affect him, but he soon disappears from the story. Hector has the ability for a time to know himself and his future, but he does not accept what he sees and so is destroyed. Redfield makes this point clear, that this transcendent ability is central to the Western epic genre:
It is a peculiarity of the epic that its heroes can, at certain moments, share the perspective of poet and audience and look down upon themselves…. Achilles tests the limits of the heroic; when he commits himself to the killing of Hector, he sees his own death also before him and accepts it. He is thus an actor who both acts and knows his own actions as part of an unfolding pattern (89).
Achilles, Odysseus, and the characters of Babylon 5 thus have a unique ability as epic heroes: they can, when the time is right, see beyond their own situations and know where they fit in with their reality. Epic heroes such as Achilles are aware that their actions are choices, that those choices have consequences, and that they must face those consequences with responsibility for having freely chosen to do what they do. Not all characters in the Western epic are aware of themselves and their place in their culture — only heroes have that ability, what Lattimore calls prescience, to see beyond themselves.
In order to understand himself, his culture, and how he fits in, Achilles must first be separated from his culture, which occurs when he chooses to leave the battlefield after Agamemnon insults him in book one. Because Agamemnon cares only for his material wealth and status, he has no chance of understanding his culture (he accepts it readily) or transcending it, and so he cannot be a true epic hero like Achilles. Achilles is so upset with Agamemnon’s insult that he eschews the culture and heroic impulse that drove him to Troy nine long years ago. As a warrior withdrawing from battle, notes Toohey, “Achilles begins to reject the heroic world; as a way of life … it is suddenly making demands upon him that he cannot tolerate” (124). If the heroic impulse allows a leader who is only a leader because of material prosperity and not inner quality to steal property and besmirch honor in front of those who bestow such honor, Achilles will have no more of it, and so “he retreats from his society to take refuge in what is left, his individuality” (125), allowing him to slowly come to know his culture from an external vantage, and thus can become a full, unique epic hero.
When he learns of Patroclus’s death, and that he has tarried from the battlefield and his heroic culture too long, Achilles the epic hero gains his first moment of heroic prescience or transcendent understanding. Achilles is aware that his response to the death of his friend (his freely made choice) will seal his fate at Troy in what Murray calls his “special supernatural knowledge that his revenge will be followed immediately by his death” (142). As a hero, he is both bound by fate and a partial maker of his own destiny through his choices. Having spent enough time away from the heroic culture, Achilles knows that it is flawed, but he accepts at last that it is the only way of life for him, but he now understands it, unlike the other mortals. He never claims that the heroic impulse lifestyle is morally wrong or fundamentally uncharitable; he simply realizes that it is terribly costly, and, knowing the cost, chooses to return to the heroic world.
Achilles’s greatest militaristic achievement in the Iliad, the slaying of Hector, is bookended by his two heroic moments of heightened understanding. During the action, he has not the time to think or philosophically observe — that is part of the tension of his function as an epic war hero; he can understand his actions and himself before and after what he chooses to do, but he also has to act. Once he accepts his mortality and his fate by choosing to kill Hector he loses his transcendent understanding for a time (as evidenced by his mistreatment of Hector’s corpse) but regains it again at the close of the poem when Priam asks for the return of his son’s body.
Achilles’s confrontation with Priam is a remarkably different scene and tone compared to the beginning confrontation with Agamemnon, though it fulfills the ring composition structure of the poem. Instead of the anger of book one, Achilles responds to the Trojan’s request with a silent, introspective gaze. Priam appeals to Achilles’s father, reminding him again of his mortality, but Achilles has already accepted this. Murray elucidates that this quiet deliberation again “enables Achilles to know his situation and no longer merely experience it. What was baffling in its immediacy becomes lucid at a distance. Achilles surveys and comprehends his world and himself” (87). There is no longer any need for anger, since Achilles the epic hero finally understands his role in life and accepts his own mortality. As he makes clear to Priam, he has even begun to understand the gods themselves, at least from his limited, mortal perspective.
Before returning Hector’s body, Achilles tells Priam a story of Zeus’s two jars, one of good and one of evil, which Zeus sprinkles out indiscriminately on humanity. According to Achilles, humanity can get no grace, no direction, no hope from the gods. His frustration is ironic, considering Zeus has been manipulating the events of the Iliad to help Achilles regain his glory. Zeus refutes Achilles’s notion early in the Odyssey when he declares humanity blames the gods for their misfortunes when they actually receive what they deserve based on their free choices. Achilles’s logic is flawed, but his final conclusion is correct: mankind is responsible for its actions, regardless of the gods. He understands this as an epic hero. He chooses to return Hector to Priam just as he chose to kill Hector earlier, even believing the heroic world is flawed and ruled by disinterested deities. He cannot do anything to change it, since only he understands it, but he does what he can and returns Hector to his father, easing a fellow mortal’s suffering.
This is not to say Achilles is a completely changed person. Epic heroes are essentially monolithic. They learn the true nature of themselves, the universe, and mankind’s place in it, and they make decisions and face the consequences of their actions, but they are not inwardly transformed. Achilles returns to his flawed heroic world because it is the only culture around — and he truly values it, even after he more fully understands it and mankind with all its faults. Epic heroes do not always understand themselves or their universe — it is an attribute they must learn and develop — but when they face their most critical decisions, epic heroes distinguish themselves from their companions not only by their superior physical traits but also their superior mental awareness and transcendent understanding.
The Western epic explores the important questions of life, such as meaning, purpose, and destiny, and epic heroes grapple with these issues, sometimes with, sometimes against the gods of their universe. The gods do what they do, but so do humans. As mortals, humans have a limited time to live meaningfully, and heroes of the Western epic embody the importance of life lived well. Mankind is responsible for his choices, and Achilles’s acceptance of that responsibility is part of what makes the Iliad a meaningful story about the worth of humanity, in part because of its ability to make choices and live well in what little time it has.
Chapter Two — The Odyssey
Structure and Shape
Unlike the Iliad, the Odyssey does not have the same over-arching ring composition or chiastic structure, though the most famous part of it — Odysseus’s magical journey — does have a loose chiastic arrangement in which each hostile episode is followed by an equally dangerous peaceful episode, all attempting to prevent Odysseus from returning home, according to Leithart (cf. 180-181). This makes sense, as the Iliad is a grand war poem whose characters do not physically go anywhere and the Odyssey is Western literature’s archetypal journey story. The Odyssey is a series of six quartets in the chapter/book arrangement in which the poem exists today. Without belaboring the plot synopsis here, it is possible to define the structure of the epic with another diagram:
As a journey story whose theme is restoration from disorder to order, it makes sense the ring composition technique is not as applicable to the Odyssey. If Odysseus ends where he begins, even in a symbolic way, then he has failed in his quest and his epic poem is a complete disappointment. Even with little of the ring composition that dominates the Iliad, the Odyssey is a lengthy tale with a definite structure and shape. It is a journey toward restoration of both Ithaca and its king’s family.
A Central Hero amid Others
In addition to its limited use of ring composition while incorporating a new narrative structure, the Odyssey’s hero also expands the nature of the Western epic begun by the Iliad. Odysseus is the antithesis of Achilles. Instead of the emotional hero who gains understanding and reconciliation, Lattimore explains that “Odysseus has strong passions, but his intelligence keeps them under control” (51). Odysseus never acts out of uncertainty or confusion. Throughout the Iliad Odysseus distinguishes himself from his compatriots. He restores order when Agamemnon’s test of the troops backfires; he upbraids Achilles twice, privately and publically. He is deemed responsible as a spy and warrior during the night raid, and he is trusted as the diplomat to return Chryseis to her father. As a different kind of man, Odysseus takes the epic hero role in a new direction.
Odysseus, as a different kind of man, survives both the battlefield and the different obstacles on his supernatural journey back home. By choosing mortality and war-won glory, Achilles’s peace at the end of the Iliad is tenuous at best, and since he is fit only for the battlefield, he would not survive the world Odysseus conquers. Odysseus’s goal is to return home and restore his kingdom, and when he does, the reader is left with the sense that Odysseus’s line is secure in the person of Telemachus, his son. In order to survive his return and complete his restoration, the new hero must use his cleverness and guile — Achilles-like brute strength will not defeat Sirens or a Cyclops.
Through his mental cleverness, Odysseus frees his men from the cave of the Cyclops. Knowing brute strength would never enable them to remove the stone barrier keeping them captive, Odysseus tricks the Cyclops into both believing he is “nobody” so no consequences will come from his identity and also drinking too much wine so they can effect their escape. Odysseus’s identity, which he frequently abandons during his journey, is the Odyssey’s key theme of dealing with the transcendent: self-knowledge in a world of transformative magic and death. Similarly, Odysseus’s cleverness allows him to keep his men safe from the Sirens’ song. While he allows himself to hear their beautiful song and is tempted to follow it, his cleverness ensures his security. Strength cannot conquer the call of the Sirens; only a new kind of epic hero with wits to supplement prowess can survive the post-war challenges of the Odyssey.
As an epic hero, Odysseus is multifaceted, just as Achilles was more than just an angry warrior. Not just a clever survivor, Odysseus is also a liar. Beye translates this otherwise nefarious trait into a necessary element for Odysseus as a survivor in such a dangerous, complex world: “Never a straightforward person, he is cunning and always suspicious” (149). Beye sees Odysseus’s liberal use of deception as his “greatest strength” (149). In a world dominated by amoral deities, it is understandable that an epic hero is not bound by any inner or external compunction of morality. “Everybody lies,” says Commander Sinclair of Babylon 5. Odysseus rarely tells the truth because survival is key, not being “good.” As a survivor of a different kind of battle (the voyage home), Odysseus expands the limits of the Western epic hero by using whatever resources he needs (such as cleverness and moral liberality) to overcome any situation in order to survive. Like Achilles, Odysseus chooses to be the hero he must be in his circumstances. Achilles must follow his heroic impulse back to the battlefield; Odysseus must follow his heroic impulse to complete his epic journey. Odysseus’s journey is not only an important variation of the epic story but also a key aspect of his heroic nature. Joseph Campbell’s delineation of the various paths of the archetypal hero journey in The Hero with a Thousand Faces demonstrates Odysseus’s epic path in three main stages: departure, initiation, and return.
Departure
The hero’s journey begins with his departure from what he knows, heeding what Campbell refers to as the “call to adventure” (36). Odysseus and his companions heeded Agamemnon’s call to adventure ten years before, beginning the Trojan War. Odysseus now heeds the call to return home. As an epic poem, the Odyssey begins in medias res (in the middle of things), so Odysseus has already begun his return home when the poem begins. The next phase of the departure is the advent of supernatural aide or “protective figure” (69). Athena provides this function for Odysseus throughout both Homeric poems, most notably by transforming him into an unrecognizable old beggar upon his return to Ithaca so he can reconnoiter his situation secretly.
Even with divine assistance, Odysseus encounters many conflicts during his journey, especially while on his magical journey of fantastical creatures recounted in books nine through twelve (the section using ring composition). It is during this phase of his journey that he has no divine help from Athena, allowing his true greatness as a new kind of epic hero, utilizing strength, cleverness, and deceit to shine. The final element of the departure is the “belly of the beast” (69), which Campbell describes as a passage into “a form of self-annihilation” (91). This is fitting, since meeting the Cyclops is Odysseus’s first test of preservation by non-physical means, and here Odysseus begins his thematic journey of self-understanding in his world through his ever-changing identity. By calling himself “Nobody” or “No-man,” Odysseus further distinguishes himself from Achilles as an epic hero who outwits his opponents instead of simply out fighting them, simultaneously fulfilling Campbell’s “self-annihilation” by destroying or disguising his true identity throughout his journey.
Initiation
Few literary protagonists encounter stranger characters and trials than Odysseus does in his poem, especially during his return section, which Campbell calls “a dream landscape of curiously fluid, ambiguous forms” (97) and a “long and really perilous path” (109). Odysseus, as a hero unlike Achilles, cannot solve his problems by accepting his fate and killing his foes. Leithart considers Odysseus on his journey “a ‘man of twists and turns,’ who wears disguises and assumes false identities, who adapts himself and waits patiently for his opportunity to strike … [as] a man of cunning words” (150). The battlefield never changes; Achilles only changes in his understanding of it. Odysseus’s journey changes at every stop, and he must change and adapt too quickly during his initiation phase for transcendent self-understanding or prescience to do him any good.
The next sub-phase of the initiation according to Campbell is the confrontation with the Mother Goddess figure or the Temptress, and Circe fulfills both of these roles well. Campbell describes the Goddess as “the paragon of all paragons of beauty, … the incarnation of the promise of perfection” (110, 111). Circe beguiles Odysseus’s men, and Odysseus willingly beds her to restore his non-clever crew. This is another example of Odysseus’s readiness to be and do whatever is necessary to achieve his amoral goal of returning home. Despite his claims of love and faithfulness to his wife Penelope, Odysseus chooses to abandon physical fidelity to restore his family. As the Temptress, Circe temporarily succeeds in delaying Odysseus for her pleasure, but he eventually resumes his return; Circe then acts as the Mother Goddess figure, directing Odysseus to the next source of guidance and information: Tiresias in Hades.
Odysseus’s encounter with Tiresias represents a metaphorical fulfillment of the next aspect of Campbell’s hero adventure, the “atonement with the father” (36-7). It is metaphorical because Odysseus reunites and atones with his literal father at the end of the poem. Here, Tiresias represents wisdom and lucidity, attributes clever and guileful Odysseus needs. By making a sacrifice that appeases Tiresias, yielding to his nature and wisdom, Odysseus recognizes that he does not have everything alone he needs to complete his quest. He will need Athena’s help later, and here he needs the advice and guidance of Tiresias to reach his destination and become a full, self-aware epic hero.
After the reconciliation with the father, Campbell recognizes the archetypal hero achieves a kind of apotheosis, a “divine state to which the human hero attains who has gone beyond the last terrors of ignorance” (151). Odysseus travels into the Underworld, gains wisdom and advice from Tiresias, and safely navigates out. He is about to lose his crew and possessions, but he surpasses the fears of ignorance and knows where to go and what to do, which is for him the last phase of the initiation, the “ultimate boon” (37). Odysseus will not be fully satisfied until his quest is complete, but he knows how to do it.
In an ironic way, Odysseus is offered the enjoyments of the ultimate boon without fully returning home. After losing his crew and possessions, Odysseus encounters Calypso, another Temptress figure who succeeds in wooing Odysseus for seven years with the ultimate boon of a home and rest from his journey. When his resolve to return home to his family overcomes his desire to be through with his journey, Odysseus again receives the supernatural aid of Athena, and he begins the final phase of his quest.
Return
Odysseus’s final phase begins when he receives what Campbell calls “the rescue from without” (37), which come in the forms of King Alcinous and the Phaecians. This final stop before Ithaca completes the ring structure section of the Odyssey. Odysseus arrives at Troy with nothing and leaves with the spoils of war; he arrives at Phaecia with even less (no army, not even clothes) and leaves with more treasures than he earns at Troy and, more important, a better understanding of himself and his limitations.
Completing the symmetry of the hero’s journey, Campbell refers to the “crossing of the return threshold” (37), adding that it is a brief time of reflection in which “[m]any failures attest to the difficulties of this life-affirmative threshold” (218). Odysseus loses his crew, his Trojan plunder, and twenty years with his wife and child — Telemachus’s lifetime. He uses his cunning, strength, and guile to succeed, even relying on supernatural and human aid to return home. Yet his work is not done, for according to Campbell the “returning hero, to complete his adventure, must survive the impact of the world” (226). For Odysseus, this is his confrontation with the suitors.
Having learned what he needs to learn as an epic hero, Odysseus is finally able to slough off all of his hidden identities and resume his place as husband of Penelope and ruler of Ithaca. With his son’s assistance, Odysseus mercilessly eradicates the suitors and his disloyal servants. He fulfills Campbell’s penultimate sub-phase of the return as the “Master of the Two Worlds” (37), as master both of his physical territory and family and master of his sense of self and place in the world. With Athena’s intervention in eliminating any retribution from the suitors’ families, the knowledge that his son will be a worthy successor, and restoration with his wife and father, Odysseus completes his quest and ends his heroic journey with what Campbell calls the “freedom to live” (37). He knows who he is and restores his kingdom, but he has not lost his guile. Epic heroes do not change. Odysseus, finally at home, will live fully content with his unchanging nature.
Like Achilles, Odysseus is surrounded by complementary characters who further distinguish his status as the epic hero of the poem. In a tale of household restoration set against the backdrop of the heroic world, it is fitting to contrast Odysseus as a hero at the end of his quest with his son Telemachus the burgeoning hero.
Telemachus is a hero in miniature, and through him the poem demonstrates how Western ancient epic heroes are made. Not every man in the ancient world is a hero, as this poem shows distinctly through the self-centered groups of Odysseus’s crewmates and Penelope’s suitors. Growing up surrounded by women, servants, and un-heroic gluttons, Telemachus has no initiation into the life of the hero until he embarks on his own quest to find his father. In doing so, he also seeks himself, his identity as a warrior’s son in a heroic world, for he cannot learn what it means to be an epic hero in his childhood company at home. Beye points out that “Telemachus emerges from the perversion of human behavior that the suitors are enacting in his childhood home to encounter proper behavior at Pylos and Sparta” (183). By literally leaving his home, he figuratively leaves behind childish things, including the immature lifestyle of indulgence and lasciviousness of the suitors. Under the experienced tutelage of Menelaus at Sparta, Nestor at Pylos, and Nestor’s son Peisistratus who models what Telemachus should be, the son of an epic hero and warrior, continues Beye, Telemachus “becomes more aware of his heroic parentage, [and] he does achieve heroic stature himself” (155).
But epic heroes are not made in the classroom; Telemachus needs an opportunity to apply his newfound heroism, and reuniting with his father is not enough. The destruction of the suitors is Telemachus’s passage to manhood and final preparation for the heroic life. By the end of the poem, Telemachus puts his mother in her proper place, unites with his father, and rebukes the suitors before aiding his father in slaughtering them all as a warrior. The Ithacan line is secure with a third generation epic hero.
Plot of Historical Significance
The historical significance of the Odyssey comes more from its thematic components than the direct plot itself: battling Cyclops and Sirens are not commonplace, and slaughtering suitors is not a typical method of restoring one’s home and family. One key theme of the Odyssey with substantial ramifications today is its expression of social behavior. The Iliad portends the causes and effects of the destruction of a city and civilization; the Odyssey exemplifies how people live together and restore civilization.
The demonstration of hospitality is the Odyssey’s main expression of proper social behavior. Each member of the Ithacan royal family encounters the improper abuse and proper use of hospitality in many ways: the Cyclops’s dearth of hospitality results in the death of seven of Odysseus’s crewmen; Circe’s and Calypso’s surfeit of hospitality result in the wastage of several years during Odysseus’s quest to return home; the suitors’ abuse of Penelope’s hospitality is the major trial she must overcome in the poem and motivates Telemachus to begin his quest for maturity. The Phaecians’ hospitality to Odysseus ensures his safe return to Ithaca. Through their hospitality, Odysseus’s faithful servants distinguish themselves from those loyal to the suitors. Because of her hospitality to him while he is disguised as a beggar, Odysseus gains hope that Penelope is still faithful to him. Telemachus receives much hospitality from Nestor and Menelaus, and through their actions he becomes a proper hero in a proper society, a man who is kind and generous to strangers and others in need. The Odyssey clearly emphasizes hospitality as a distinguishing aspect of proper society. Those who abuse it, the suitors and Odysseus’s crew, are all punished, usually with death. As a theme of society’s right conduct, the Odyssey’s message of the importance of hospitality is still significant today. Choosing to be gracious and hospitable, especially to strangers and those in need, is an admirable quality worth emulating, and helps maintain a proper society.
A Theme of Transcendent Understanding
More than their historical value, proper hospitality and social conduct — how to live in society — are part of the Odyssey’s theme of transcendent understanding. The poem from beginning to end is about restoring broken societies. Ithaca at large is crumbling and must be mended; Ithaca’s ruling family also needs to be reunited. This tension is continually compared to Agamemnon’s failed family and his son Orestes’s slaying of his own mother and her lover. Orestes’s actions are praised throughout the Odyssey, and Telemachus is often enjoined to be like him if it becomes necessary. Not only do the heroes of the poem require proper social conduct, but the gods do also. Toohey claims “that Zeus does indeed desire a just world and that he will act through heroes such as Orestes and Odysseus … to establish this state” (46). The restoration of proper social conduct, with correct hospitality as one crucial aspect of it, then, is mandated by Olympus. Orestes is praised for avenging his father’s murder. Odysseus is praised for eliminating the suitors because they abuse hospitality and proper social conduct. Odysseus’s crew is justly killed because they transgress divine social boundaries by eating Helios’s cattle. The greatest injustice in the Odyssey is the abuse of proper social conduct, which is punished by the gods through the free agency of mortal heroes.
Those who choose to obey and restore right social relationships are the epic heroes of the Odyssey, joining the poem to the Iliad. Achilles separates himself from his peers in part because he hates Agamemnon’s abuse of hospitality when he takes something that was rightfully given to him by his peers; in one sense Achilles restores the proper social structure by his generosity to the combatants in Patroclus’s funeral games in book twenty-three and, most significantly, by returning Hector’s body to Priam at the end of the poem. Achilles learns that his connection to the gods and his society is intertwined with proper social behavior, which he demonstrates by his actions. Similarly, Odysseus and Telemachus learn the connection of the epic hero to society and the gods through proper social action. Hospitality is a choice made by epic heroes because they understand the nature of their world better than non-heroic people; they know their choices have consequences for themselves and others, and only through proper human interaction can society be maintained. Odysseus spends twenty years returning home after a great social injustice (Paris’s kidnapping of Helen); he is certainly motivated to choose to restore right social interaction, especially in his own home.
Choice is essential in the Odyssey. Beye notes that “Athena gives Telemachus advice, but he acts upon it and gets the story moving” (151). As a nascent epic hero, Telemachus quickly learns the importance of choices and facing their consequences. Since he is a hero, separate from his fellows, his responsibility is greater, in part, because he, like all epic heroes, understands the universe and his place in it better than others. As a man and future ruler of a kingdom, he learns to be generous and hospitable to those in need, not just because the gods prefer it, but because it is the proper way for society to interact, especially epic heroes who understand society better than non-heroes do.
Odysseus, as an epic hero, chooses to restore order and punish those who abuse proper social conduct. He does this not only as an epic hero who knows the gods and the nature of the universe (clearly better than his crew does), but as a hero who, like his son, is on a quest for self-knowledge. Achilles knows himself when he knows his place in the universe and chooses to stay and fight, spending most of his time willingly apart from society. Odysseus, however, spends most of his poem trying to get back to society while eschewing his identity. Beye says of Odysseus that he “is a man whose need to reinvent himself motivates his stoic determination to get home and resume the mantle of husband, father, squire as much as it does his notable artistry in creating new identities whenever he is asked who he is” (203). Odysseus’s multiplicity of identities may be more ubiquitous in the Odyssey than lessons on hospitality. He tells the Cyclops he is “No-man,” he is transformed into an old beggar by Athena; he creates a persona within that persona to test his servants. He even creates false identities to test Penelope and his own father at the close of the poem despite the fact he has already secured his kingdom. Clever, guileful Odysseus utilizes trickery and deception throughout to achieve his ends.
Twice, at crucial points in his journey, he is prevented from using his usual tactics, and both times Odysseus recovers his true identity and gains self-understanding. The first is his encounter with Tiresias in the Underworld, when he must acknowledge he needs wisdom and advice beyond his own ability to succeed. Odysseus’s second encounter with self-understanding is with the Phaecians, when he is directly asked the important question of identity, “who are you?” Having just wept at a song of the Trojan War, Odysseus can no longer hide his identity. Toohey comments that “[r]eliving the past forces him, first to disclose his identity, and second to emerge from the shell of self-pity, negativism, and self-interest caused by the loss of his fleet and his companions” (52). Like with Tiresias, Odysseus gets the assistance and reward necessary to complete his return home, but only after he abjures his false identities and guile and reveals himself with complete honesty. He already understands his universe of hospitality and proper social structure and enjoys mostly uninterrupted harmony with the gods on his journey. Self-knowledge, and his acceptance of it, is Odysseus’s transcendent path to success.
In different but equally important ways, Achilles and Odysseus as epic heroes successfully embrace the Western epic’s theme of transcendent understanding: Achilles learns the true nature of his society, his gods, and his place in the universe; Odysseus learns and accepts his identity and self-awareness, choosing mortality over isolated immortality, with all of its (and his) shortcomings. Epic heroes make choices, for good or bad, and face the consequences of those choices as representatives of all humanity, knowing that others do not have the transcendent heroic understanding to know what is necessary to live the full, heroic life. The Western ancient epic asks important questions about life, the value of mankind, and proper understanding of reality. These questions, like humanity itself, have not changed since the Homeric epic age. They are still relevant today. Babylon 5, the rebirth of the Western ancient epic for a contemporary audience, asks them again in a new way.
Works Cited In Part One
Beye, Charles Rowan. Ancient Epic Poetry: Homer, Apollonius, Virgil with a Chapter on the Gilgamesh Poems. Wauconda: Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc., 2006.
Bloom, Harold. Where Shall Wisdom be Found? New York: Riverhead, 2004.
Bowra, C.M. “Some Characteristics of Literary Epic.” Virgil: A Collection of Critical Essays. Twentieth Century Views. Ed. Steele Commager. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1966.
Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. 2nd Edition. Bollingen Series XVII. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1968, 1949.
Homer. TheIliad. Trans. Richmond Lattimore. Chicago: U Chicago P, 1951.
—. TheOdyssey. Trans. Richmond Lattimore. New York: Harper and Row, 1967.
Lattimore, Richmond. Introduction. TheIliad. By Homer. Trans. Richmond Lattimore. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1951.
Leithart, Peter J. Heroes of the City of Man: A Christian Guide to Select Ancient Literature. Moscow: Canon Press, 1999.
Murray, Gilbert. The Rise of the Greek Epic. 4th ed. New York: OUP, 1960.
Powell, Barry B. Homer. Blackwell Introductions to the Classical World. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2004.
Redfield, James M. “Nature and Culture in the Iliad: Purification.” Modern Critical Interpretations: The Iliad. Ed. Harold Bloom. New York: Chelsea House, 1987.
Toohey, Peter. Reading Epic: An Introduction to the Ancient Narratives. London: Routledge, 1992.
Whitman, Cedric H. Homer and the Heroic Tradition. New York: Norton, 1958.
Wood, Michael. In Search of the Trojan War. Updated Ed. Berkley: U California P, 1996, 1985.
Many of you out there probably think Sting’s 1993 album Ten Summoner’s Tales is his best album. It’s hard to argue against that, really. I thoroughly enjoy it myself. Sting as a solo artist is an egregiously underrated purveyor of musical delights and haunting melodies and lyrics. Sure, everyone likes The Police (and rightly so), but for some reason Sting has become a bit of a punching bag — this is especially odd, considering the recent tidal shift in public sentiment for singers like Norah Jones and Tony Bennett (who knew he’d make a comeback?), as well as his own willingness to make fun of himself (he’s far less pretentious than most musicians and movie-star dilettantes). Ten Summoner’s Tales, driven by “If I Ever Lose My Faith in You” and “Fields of Gold,” is understandably Sting’s most memorable album around what most consider the apex of his popularity (which is the key word for that sort of people), and I have already acknowledged it is great, and since people still think it is good, it is a gem but not a “forgotten” gem. The album preceding it, The Soul Cages, is a marvelous piece worth examining (perhaps in a later “concept album” series), but the album after it was the big challenge: how does one follow a musical (and commercial) success? With Mercury Falling.
In order to “keep it fresh,” as the kids say, this time through this “forgotten gem,” instead of a lengthy lyrical analysis complemented by intricate musical annotations, we shall highlight some of the interesting bits about each song as an aid to entice you to rediscover the album in all its delight.
“The Hounds of Winter”
It begins with the title of the album, which is pretty neat, especially since that’s where the album ends as well. It’s a bit of a sad song, lyrically, dealing with a break up between the narrator and his girl. Sting’s vocal variety is in full range right from the start, complemented well with the almost jarring musical beat, which feels like it is starting and stopping throughout the song (but done rather well). I like the metaphor of the “hounds of winter,” working on a variety of levels, showing Sting’s intelligent lyrical skill.
“I Hung My Head”
Another sad song, this time about a man about to be executed for thoughtlessly killing a traveler, Sting plays around with the vocals and musical lines quite a bit to make this song worth multiple listenings, despite its gallows atmosphere. The lyrics again demonstrate Sting’s ironical wit (though the “gallows humor” might repel some, even though it is only evidenced briefly). The song is reminiscent of the ballads motif pervasive throughout Ten Summoner’s Tales, but Sting adds enough other elements to distance the song from being considered an add-on. The ending especially makes it a good song, as Sting’s vocal variety in the descant rescues the narrative song from being too melodramatic.
“Let Your Soul Be Your Pilot”
Mixing a gospel feel with the pervasive wintery mood dominant on the entire album, Sting creates one of the more upbeat songs on the album. It’s definitely a sing-along kind of song, especially at the choruses. Even though it’s already the longest song on the album, usually the listener desires the song to be longer, even before Sting gets to the modified ending (a popular device on the album). At the outro, the beat and melodic line changes into an entirely different song, but somehow it is entirely consistent with the rest of the song (and the album as a whole).
“I Was Brought to My Senses”
“I Was Brought to My Senses” is another good example of Sting’s impressive ability to mix an eclectic array of influences into a universal song with universal appeal. Combining Romanticism, more gospel-related ideas (especially from the heavy “Amazing Grace” motifs throughout), and Latin American rhythms, Sting keeps the album moving along in unexpected yet thoroughly familiar patterns. The words are a great outpouring of the efficacy of “general revelation” when infused with a proper bent toward “special revelation,” and should not be missed, especially when one realizes it is actually an authentic musical version of Dante’s Comedy. It somehow ends up being more of a gospel song than the previous overt gospel number and is another positive song (certainly one of the most uplifting songs) on the album.
“You Still Touch Me”
As if the uplifted mood is to continue here, “You Still Touch Me” feels like a companion piece to “I Was Brought to My Senses.” The beat is more emphatic and jaunty, the lyrics are even more thoroughly positive, and the energy level persists at possibly the highest level for the album (not including “Lithium Sunset,” which is more of an epilogue to the album). Sting’s vocal range is in full force again, perhaps driven by the continuing gospel-infused ideas of which he sings. Though it also deals with love and loss, it’s by far the happiest song on the album, since the singer of the song is clearly at a good place of acceptance and rebirth and renewal, having just been brought back to his senses and understanding life from a whole-universe perspective, not just the confines of a solitude experience of disappointment and despair.
“I’m So Happy I Can’t Stop Crying”
Though this is a sort of concept album, I don’t think all the songs are as interconnected as they are on, say, Sting’s earlier work The Soul Cages, a thoroughly-unified album. Melancholy certainly is a pervasive mood on this present album, and that dominates this present song. The narrator relates the daily sorrows and trials of living a life recently separated from his wife and children — nothing good ever comes from that situation. Though the song does return to the bittersweet chorus at its conclusion, the best part of the song comes in the upturn of mood in the final verse (supported by its melodic modulation), with the narrator’s great declaration “Everybody’s got to leave the darkness sometime.” Even in the worst situations of life, we cannot allow melancholy to turn into utter despair. We all walk through the valley of the shadow of death, but we all have to leave the darkness sometime.
“All Four Seasons”
Sting lightens the mood quite a bit with what is an enjoyable song that could have been a holdover from Ten Summoner’s Tales, in that “All Four Seasons” uses a clever trope to guide its lyrical ideas, similar to “Seven Days” and “Shape of My Heart” on the previous album. Whether that is the case, it is still a good song on this album belying its lyrical treatment of the narrator’s love for a mutable woman with a pervasively positive musical accompaniment. Despite the temperamental relationship, the song embraces a commitment to love, which is a key aspect of why this is a good song on a very good album.
“Twenty Five to Midnight” and “La Belle Dame Sans Regret”
Having access to the album released in the United States, being a United States citizen and whatnot, I have only listened to the album without the European/Asian market release including the track “Twenty Five to Midnight” (I don’t even know if it’s hyphenated). Similarly, being mainly monolingual (not directly an effect of being a United States citizen, though many internationalists will claim so), I do not precisely understand the lyrical content of “La Belle Dame Sans Regret,” which I’m fairly certain translates roughly to “The Not-too-shabby-looking Lady who has no Mercy” (as most of them are). It’s a nice bopping-along song, and fits very well on the album, since it’s mainly about the incompatibility of these two people. Je ne comprends pas bien, but it’s still nice.
“Valparaiso”
I like this song for its melodic distinction from the rest of the album. It is reminiscent of an Irish coastal lament, which is appropriate, considering the lyrics are about that very sort of thing (even though it is about sailing around the Cape of Good Hope to some town named Valparaiso — which one, we’re not really sure, though I am sure it’s not the one in Ireland, since there isn’t one). It is a sea shanty, basically, and Sting does a good job of attempting that genre here.
“Lithium Sunset”
So the album comes full close and full circle. With a final jaunty little outro of a tune, Sting wraps up a sometimes positive, mainly melancholy, always enjoyable album. Having begun the album Mercury Falling with the words “Mercury falling” in the opening song “The Hounds of Winter,” Sting concludes “Lithium Sunset” with a sort of country-and-western stylized uplifting number ending with the words “mercury falling.” The sunset eases the pain and relieves the heartache of the day. He’s been scattered, shattered, and knocked out of the race, but with the light of the sun (Son?), he will get better and his soul will be healed. I take the pharmacological aspect to the song to be more ironic than literal, since nothing on the album suggests otherwise (in fact, quite the opposite). It’s an organic ending to an organic album. Enjoy it, again and again.
According to David Platt, author of Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream, one becomes a Christian by having faith in Jesus. So far so good. We should reconsider the needs of people around the world and live more sacrificially. Those warrant a gold star. Unfortunately, then, comes the other 99.4% of the book. In order to be a Christian, according to David Platt, one must adopt at least one child from an impoverished country, have a heart for the entire world, and spend time evangelizing in some part of the world that has not yet heard the gospel. Well … no. He is incorrect. Like most of the unfortunate “popular Christian authors” of the recent past (Wilkinson’s Prayer of Jabez, Piper’s Desiring God, Eldredge’s Captivating, Warren’s Purpose Driven Life, in no particular order), Platt takes a couple of verses he thinks are most important, declares they are the sum total of the Bible/message of God/ontology of Christianity, and glosses over verses that contradict or qualify what he wants the Bible to say. As with most disingenuous self-effacing scribblers, Platt spends a good deal of time prevaricating and apologizing for his examples and how he doesn’t want to make anyone feel bad for challenging their views and beliefs. Why he continues to use so many specific examples and follow them with “these may not be typical of your experience” is beyond me, and it discredits the entire purpose of using specific examples or narrative samples. His insinuation if we don’t make the same choice he made about adopting a child from an impoverished country we are not biblical Christians is so ludicrous he almost makes John Piper sound orthodox. Almost.
Like many of his compeers, Platt’s ideas are built on the faulty premise the church is built on Matthew 28:18-20, not Acts 2:42. Since his beginning premise is wrong, it follows just about all of his conclusions are wrong. Similarly embarrassing is his definition of “making disciples.” Platt can’t even exegete Matthew 28:18-20 sensibly. First Platt says the verses are a series of commands, and then he says baptizing and teaching are subordinate to and consist of making disciples. It’s a bit confusing, as I said, since he surfeits his work with seemingly stellar examples of how the people in his “faith community” (he can’t even say “local church” without being embarrassed, apparently) have done such wonderful things (at the end of the book he apologizes again by saying his “faith community” doesn’t always get things right) using this interpretation, but it might not be for everyone.
One example of Platt’s glossing over verses that qualify (or outright refute) his claims is his treatment of Ephesians 4:11. Platt acknowledges Paul said some people are given to the church as apostles, some as evangelists, some as pastors-teachers, but then Platt essentially says “but really everyone in the church is supposed to be an overseas evangelist in order to be a genuine Christian, since Jesus told the disciples in Mt. 28:18-20 to go.” Another eisegetical passage is his treatment of Romans 10. Platt seems to interpret verse 15a (“And how can anyone preach unless they are sent?”) to mean “since Jesus told the disciples to go in Mt. 28:18-20, everyone has been sent to be an overseas missionary to the parts of the world that haven’t yet heard the gospel.” Let’s consider the repercussions if Platt is correct: all genuine Christians (whom he inanely and incessantly describes with his pet phrase “radical abandonment” and variations thereon) leave America for the un-gospelled areas of the world. Who will support them financially? (God, true, but why then does the church need to exist at all?) If the church exists solely to be a mode of evangelism to un-gospelled areas of the world, why did God give various people to the church who aren’t evangelists? Why do spiritual gifts other than evangelism exist? Now we begin to see why Platt is wrong: he homogenizes the church into nothing but individuals with a heart for the world (in his own definition) who spend time overseas evangelizing the un-gospelled (who then must have to adopt at least one child from an impoverished country to be radically abandoned to the gospel).
Another key failing of this book is Platt’s contradictory definition of “the world.” To him, “having a heart for the world” can only mean “going where the gospel has not yet been preached.” To him, people who “have a heart for their own city or region in America” are just lazy people who are too much in love with their possessions to really be authentic Christians (who are people who go overseas to evangelize unreached people). Italy, Germany, France — they aren’t “the world.” Only people who haven’t heard the gospel yet are “the world.” This reminds us, then, of what would happen if all American Christians followed what he says — no one in America would be Christians, leaving the entire country unchurched. Would it be okay, then, for Christians to go to America and spread the gospel? Most likely not, since authentic Christianity (being radically abandoned to Jesus) means spreading the gospel only to people who haven’t heard it yet (so why all the stories of how he spread the gospel in New Orleans and how other members of his “faith community” reach American inner-city people?).
Despite the subtitle, Platt does not spend much time actually refuting the American Dream. The only relevant parts of the “American Dream” to him are materialism (the acquisitive kind, not the philosophical synonym to naturalism) and sloth. At the end of the book, amidst his other apologies, Platt offers some platitudes (I had to do it some time) about how he loves America and is glad for the freedoms God has allowed him to have in America — but, really, he wants us to feel bad for being Americans. American Christians don’t take Christianity seriously is what he implies throughout the book — otherwise why would he spend so much time comparing American Christians with their luxury cars, luxury clothes, million-dollar buildings, luxury tvs, and luxury everything else with the many Christians around the world he’s visited who have to hide their faith and go many miles out of their way to meet secretly in fear of the government? Americans aren’t real Christians, because they are too comfortable with their faith and the government, which doesn’t ever persecute Christians (he’s not joking, either). It’s nice Platt admits his own “faith family” is a hypocrite in this, being a four thousand-member group with their own multi-million-dollar estate — but does he say he is doing anything about it? No. They continue to worship in their overly-comfortable multi-million-dollar estate as they send missionaries out to unreached sections of the world. Leaving aside the question of biblical authenticity of “megachurches” for another time, shouldn’t Platt admit he is doing more in his own sphere of pastoral authority to conform his own church (see we not clearly now the dangers of contradicting Biblical church authority structure of a plurality of lay elders and lay deacons?) to his interpretation of what authentic Christianity looks like in abandoning American materialism? Yes, he should, but like most of his ilk, he distances himself at the end by saying he is only trying to start the discussion and get his audience thinking — he’s not actually making points that must be followed for the good of everyone (even though he also says throughout he is right and those who don’t do what he says are not living authentic Christian lives radically abandoned to Jesus).
Though he doesn’t come right out and say it explicitly, as said above Platt wants us to feel guilty for being born in America, as if God made a bit of a mistake putting us here instead of some unreached, pre-industrial area that follows after God authentically without distractions. True, Platt ineffectively says “material goods and riches aren’t intrinsically bad, and sometimes God gives people things,” but he follows that up with the New Testament never says God blesses people financially like he did in the OT (which isn’t exactly what anyone I trust would call “accurate”), and pretty much everything we have in America is a luxury we can sacrifice for the spread of the gospel, according to him. Perhaps that last thought is true, and it’s nice he doesn’t come right out with a socialistic declaration “genuine Christianity means redistributing wealth equally to all the ends of the earth,” but he gets rather legalistic toward the end about it (even though he says he doesn’t want to be). I agree most of us have more than we need, and we could certainly give more than we do (if statistics are anything to go by), but that does not equate with “only overseas missions work is the mark of genuine Christianity.” Isn’t it just possible some of us are put into America (or England, or Germany, or Italy) to minister to the people here, making disciples here, reaching the lost here? If Christians are only to go to places that haven’t heard the gospel, do we really love the people in countries that have access to the Bible but don’t believe yet by ignoring them and going only to yet-unreached places? That strikes me as the very opposite of love.
Perhaps the most destructive refutation to Platt’s arguments (calling them “arguments” for the sake of generosity) comes from Platt himself. During his final chapter enumerating his one-year plan of radical abandonment, Platt gives it all away multiple times. His first self-damaging point is his claim “we should only try to do this for a year, because we might not be able to sustain it for longer.” What? If this is the right way to actually live the authentic Christian life, why should we only do it for one year? Is he placating us by saying we only have to feel bad about being luxurious Americans for only one year and then we can go back to what we temporarily abjured? His ambiguous notion we will be changed forever by it may be true, but that doesn’t explain why we can only afford to do this for one year. He expresses one of his few cogent thoughts here, though, when he says we would all do well to pray for the world through Patrick Johnstone’s important Operation World. I agree, but I didn’t need David Platt to tell me to do it.
His second point is “read through the Bible in a year.” How is that radical? Does he tell us to study it, to memorize it, to learn the languages and read it in Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic? No, just read it. Check it off the list — go to your grave knowing one year (only once, since it’s too costly a program to do for more than one year) you read through the Bible.
Point three is to sacrifice your money for a specific purpose: he hesitates to tell us to whom (and apparently one’s own local church is not good enough), and selling your luxuries and giving that money away is likewise not good enough. Only sacrificially is good enough, lowering your standard of living until you are more like the real Christians in nonindustrial countries. Throughout the book he refers to the oft-misunderstood “rich young ruler” encounter in Mark 10. Lucidly, Platt makes the point Jesus doesn’t tell everyone who wants to follow Him to “sell all you have and give to the poor,” which was refreshingly accurate — but then he contradicts himself and intimates we are to do it, and if we don’t, we aren’t being radically abandoned enough to be an authentic follower of Christ. Jesus doesn’t tell everyone to sell all and give it to the poor, but David Platt does. (But only for a year.)
The most self-destructive part of the work comes in point four of the one-year plan: spend time in another context. Several times, Platt tells us the real Christian life is not just checking off a “to-do” list (which he himself asks us to do with reading the Bible, and the rest of this chapter, basically), and genuine Christianity is solely about spreading the gospel overseas, making disciples of previously unreached people. Now, though, Platt gives it all away: it doesn’t matter where we go, it doesn’t matter how long we go, it only matters that we go, he says. As incredulous as I was for the first eight chapters, when I read that thought from Platt I truly could not believe Multnomah Books actually let that through. According to David Platt, God’s will for our lives is so undefined it’s up to us to decide where we are to go and for how long. We can’t possibly be wrong as long as we go for a brief time to some place that hasn’t yet heard the gospel. But, if it doesn’t matter how long we stay, how does that align with the need to “make disciples”? Doesn’t that take a while? Never you mind — what really matters is that we have gone. Check it off the list, and you are being radically abandoned to Jesus (and thus, the only authentic Christians in the world). Is it possible for non-American Christians to be radically abandoned to Jesus, since they can’t abjure American luxury and go overseas? Apparently they are so innately Christian they don’t need to follow the plan Platt has for them. Just go and get it over with, backslidden American pseudo-Christians.
If that completely self-refuting point was not enough, Platt wraps it up with point five: commit to a multiplying community (which is his phrase for an authentic local church — but since America doesn’t have any authentic churches being too consumed by materialism, one must go overseas to find the real thing). Once you have fulfilled your radical conscription to temporarily go someplace where the gospel has never been heard before, you can come back and relax and support the church as it sends out the next batch of radically abandoned short-term missions trip recruits. But if the whole point of the church is solely to send out overseas missionaries, how will the church grow in ways other than numerically? Perhaps this is where all the other parts of the Bible Platt has ignored or inaccurately commentated on could help the church grow in non-numerical ways, but Platt has run out of room and time to expound on them.
Finally, now, we have the Five Pillars of Authentic Radically Abandoned Christianity. If we need more assistance, Platt tells us his website has more encouraging stories and insights by which to live radically, and we should also contribute our stories to the site while we are on and once we have completed our one-year radical commitment (but, isn’t the Internet just another American luxury distracting us from authentic Christianity? and if we have a computer, shouldn’t we be selling that to give sacrificially to a good cause?). More we could say, but I think even this little response has said enough about why this book from the world’s youngest pastor of a megachurch (please turn down your hypocrisy meters, where applicable) can easily be eschewed. Had Platt actually taken the time to Biblically refute key (and specific!) flaws of the contemporary incarnation of the “American Dream,” this may have been a pretty good book. It is, instead, just a long-winded rant about David Platt’s personal misinterpretations about the gospel message and his own pet definition of “Christian.” His ubiquitous “radical abandonment” phrase is never defined (only imaged through diverse and contradicting examples) and gets rather annoying by the end (of chapter one). Yes, we should give sacrificially and be more concerned with the entire world, but that doesn’t mean we are all called to go overseas (and certainly not on little short-term missions trip jaunts of our own design and duration) or that checking off these five pillars/procedures is in anyway radical or even authentic Christianity. The “whole world” includes our own neighborhood and our own country (is Acts 1:8 true as well as Matthew 28:18-20?); some send missionaries overseas, some support them, some are them. Not everyone in the body of Christ fulfills the same function. Fortunately, those of us who know God’s role for us (at least in its present form) feel not one iota of shame or compunction that we don’t match up to David Platt’s standards or definitions. Perhaps he will someday write the book the subtitle of this book suggests — I might want to actually read it; but that’s not what this book is about. This book is about what David Platt wants Christianity to be. He is not correct.
The following is a paper written by alumnus Steven Lane for a Film Studies/Faulkner course.
Perception is reality. This colloquialism reminds people to be careful of their actions because what others see is often what becomes. There are two works of art that confront this idea while endeavoring to answer a much more difficult question, what is truth? Truth can be seen but the act of seeing and understanding are often not the same. In As I Lay Dying and Courage Under Fire, characters deal with the hardship of understanding memories and more importantly truth. These two works are stories, fabrications in order to relate events to a listening world. For each story there are creators, gods amidst the tale. Truth is debatable. The works reveal the obscurity of truth and meddle with the existence of reality outside of truth. Reality is a creation; each storyteller reveals a reality — their reality.
Each work must be understood alone before it can become a comparison. There must be a standard set before analysis. Therefore Courage Under Fire will allow the perception of truth and the manipulation of said truth to be explained. After this explanation the work of William Faulkner will shed light upon the necessity of manipulation. This manipulation happens haphazardly and honestly habitually, as seen in As I Lay Dying.
Courage Under Fire exemplifies storyteller’s lies. The lies are not really important. I mean it is relatively unimportant as to what happened or didn’t happen. The truth in itself means very little, but revelation of that truth to the world impacts everyone. Lt. Col. Serling seeks the answers because he feels he owes it, not to himself or any one person but to the idea of truth. This story is different from the following example because it happened. It is in the past. Memory redefines truth. Memory is a fourth dimension within a three-dimensional world. There is a tangible axis system plotted in the x, y, and z directions. This fourth dimension exists outside of that plot and revolves around a time contingent. Memory would then be the unit of time. This dimension is malleable and manipulation. One can change the past acts by merely believing something other than actual events, actual truth. The other belief then becomes memory; that memory becomes truth. Mankind operates in this manipulation constantly.
In Courage Under Fire, Monfriez changes the past to cover up his actions. He remembers Walden as a hero the first time. When questioned again he remembers his own heroism. Finally, on the tracks with an approaching train he remembers reality, the actual truth. Those three manipulations are not important. The importance lies in the ability to manipulate. The perceptions propagated permanently permeate the film. They twist the truth, the history, and the lives of those involved. This ability inherently alters the film’s storyline. Each storyteller brings something different to reality. This ability to create seems to drive this godlike tendency to yearn for creative powers. Since we can create we are drawn to it. The perception might be completely diluted from actual events, but since we have chosen to view it in a particular way, the event is that particular way. Memory allows for each storyteller to play god. Why play god in a non-existent world? Because we can. It seems to me this innate sense, this ability to create without purpose, without knowledge of even creating occurs because we can. There is no sense to lies. Sure, some momentary gain or fleeting feeling of satisfaction from deception, but in the grandiose scheme of the universal existence of man, there is no sense. The ability is the cause.
The ability to tell a story, to master a domain leads each character to tell their story. Serling seeks to tell the truth. Truth being defined as the actual occurrence of events recounted. He tells the general, “In order to honor a soldier like Karen Walden, we have to tell the truth, General, about what happened over there. The whole, hard…cold truth. And until we do that, we dishonor her and every soldier who died, who gave their life for their country” (IMDB). This truth drives Serling to sift through the lies and produce the closest retelling of the actual events. Whether or not he arrives at the truth is irrelevant because whatever he decides happened is recorded and becomes memory. That memory defines the time that passed and thus becomes reality.
Moving from the film to the novel might seem awkward but it really is not. The issues are the same. How can one discern reality from a webbing of lies and misreports? There is no factual backing other than the narrators’ beliefs. These understandings are reality because their perception is the only understanding of reality they have.
Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying has been analyzed and criticized yet a full understanding cannot be attained. I would argue Faulkner did not comprehend his story’s complexities completely. The primary purpose I propose for the work is much like the characters’ in Courage Under Fire; each character wishes to tell a story. Whether the characters are conscious of their contribution to the canon Faulkner created is irrelevant. William J. Handy wrote a piece on the story and said, “Similarly with each of the other characters — their existence as participants in a journey is generically different from their existence as living, experiencing beings” (437). The characters are not aware of the story around them; if they were, then the narration would be useless because of the inherent nature of man; that is, they would lie and report differently than in the candid setting.
Each character is a member of the journey. They are journeying to Jefferson but more importantly they journey to a sense of closure and the beginning of a new chapter in life. The characters’ interpretations of actions and events evolving around them define them. Vardaman is the prime example. He is young and unable or unwilling to cope with his mother’s death. The concept has never been explained or never understood, so Vardaman relates the passing to something he does understand. “My mom is a fish” (84). This confusion of death displaced on a fish illustrates the struggle to understand death. Vardaman sees the caught fish and smells the potency of decaying flesh. Both lie still and are non-living — not dead, just not living. Vardaman then connects the two concepts and makes a logical leap: fish is non-living. Mother is non-living. Fish is mother. He still does not understand death but tells the story in a manner that is relatable, a manner of translation, from confusion to understanding.
Vardaman’s reality is void of death; there only ceases to be. He creates a story where animals and humans operate on the same plane.
Darl says that when we come to the water again I might see her and Dewey Dell says, She’s in the box; how could she have got out? She got out through the holes I bored, into the water I said, and when we come to the water again I am going to see her. My mother is not in the box. My mother does not smell like that. My mother is a fish (196).
Vardaman experiences life as a sensual being, seeing and feeling but rarely comprehending. That comprehension is not necessary. Vardaman understands within his world, his story, everything that happens. Handy’s article talks about Darl’s communication and understanding the inner Darl, but this same idea could be applied to each character. Vardaman seems simplistic in thought but not necessarily simple to understand. Handy says, “Darl’s doing, his external acts, the part he plays in the unfolding of events, become more understandable in the light of our insight into the reality of his felt experience” (438). Reality is defined by the storyteller. Darl’s story is vast in the work and easily overshadows the other voices. Darl does not create reality. Vardaman does not create it, either. No one creates it, but Faulkner uses different voices and views to create a reality that exists. Each narrator believes their reality is the true reality. We believe every piece put together is the true reality. There is no definite answer to this, only a puzzling perplexity. Reality is personal. Every understanding comes from within the mind. Creativity then magnifies reality and twists its existence.
Creativity is one of the most remarkable human conditions. Without the contingent of creativity, we are cursed to boredom, inextricably motioning robots destined for our pre-programmed solution. Creativity allows people to realize reality is what they make of it. One reality is independent of another. Yes, we assume certain absolutes among the coalition of human beings, but there is empirically no data to factually support the truth of any one reality. Perception lends itself useful in this category. The point of view, the standing and viewing of an object, could be completely identical, but two people will see two separate things. They can concur on a common definition of that being or item, but it will never be perfectly described for everyone because there is no perfect definition of something’s existence. Creativity then renders itself perfectly required. One must word something to appear to the masses as true universally where that is completely false. It seems potentially controversial to state this, but I cannot find any evidence to the contrary. There seems to be something un-seemingly eerie in the unreliability of the existence of truth. Truth personally defined is just that, a personal decision based upon the inputs of human senses and outputs of understanding. The truth of a songbird’s melody, beautiful as it may seem, is lost on the deaf ear. This is not “cheating” the system, rather it understands the uniqueness of every person’s inexhaustible intelligence. Momentary actions constantly redefine the world in which a person lives, and those definitions are not based upon a dictionary, a gathering of collected agreements and compromises of the weak minded, but rather upon the personal interpretation of man’s existence and the world in which he was blessed to live.
This creativity allows Vardaman to create a world in which his mother is a fish. A barn is red and then red again but non-existent. “The barn was still red, but it wasn’t a barn now” (Dying 223). The barn burned to the ground almost with the livestock in it, and Vardaman knows who is responsible. The truth is whatever is understood. The judgment cannot be passed. Darl started the fire to cremate his mother. Vardaman saw. Cash reminds the reader the realities of each individual are personal and cannot be judged as right or wrong. “But I aint so sho that ere a man has the right to say what is crazy and what aint. It’s like there was a fellow in every man that’s done a-past that sanity of the insanity, that watches the sane and the insane doings of that man with the same horror and the same astonishment” (238). The personal experiences are based upon the perspective of the one telling the story. Darl goes crazy in Vardaman’s story, but in Darl’s stories he is perfectly justified. F aulkner seems to argue reality’s reliance on interpretation justifies multiple views. The story can never be completely from one person. However, the story is never really complete.
The stories are all contingent upon time. There is an understood timeline. Rational humans inhabiting the earth generally work along this same timeline and have agreed to its existence and performance. Time is an adverbial concept. It disclaims those actions performed everyday providing a sense of surrounding and belonging. “I ate.” That simple sentence is understood but stands lonely in the vast eternity of life. “I ate at noon.” This small disclaimer now provides the reader with a sense of belonging; to further the reader’s understanding the author could say, “I ate at noon, yesterday, the fourth of July, 1994.” Now the reader completely understands the setting as long as the reader participates in the commonly understood frame of reference that time holds (Cole). If however that frame of reference is not set, then the reader cannot understand the placement in eternity. Faulkner addresses this phenomenon in The Sound and the Fury and Absalom, Absalom! These works void the conventional sense of time recreating the frame of reference completely. The storyteller becomes god by controlling time. This idea seems prudent to expound upon. God or a god-like entity outside of the constraints of humanity is the only one able to work outside of time. Every rational being realizes the emptiness in a life without time. Without an extinction of time there is no time. Without death, the extinction of time, there is no life. Thus, without time there is no life for those under the constraints of humanity.
The irrational being cannot understand this concept. Benjy, from The Sound and the Fury, reflects this non-existence. Faulkner created Benjy to act outside of the constraints of time. The perspective on life is drastically different when there is no end of life threat. The state of merely existing gives the storyteller a completely different view from a time-obsessed character such as Quentin. Benjy tells his existence, his only story, through sensory feelings and views. His perspective creates a reality outside of time. This reality cannot be untrue but does not apply to rational beings, because they cannot truly understand the limitlessness of Benjy’s world.
Benjy relates everything to the understandable senses he feels. He smells trees and thinks of Caddy. The closing paragraph of his chapter reveals his thoughts perfectly. It is as follows:
Then the dark came back, and he stood black in the door, and then the door turned black again. Caddy held me and I could hear us all, and the darkness, and something I could smell. And then I could see the windows, where the trees were buzzing. Then the dark began to go in smooth, bright shapes, like it always does, even when Caddy says that I have been asleep (Sound 75).
Benjy relates the nighttime ritual not with a time but with darkness in the door. The trees are buzzing outside his window; visual and audial references completely limit him to sensory understanding. In Benjy’s reality there is no time. Since there is no time, there is no death. He cannot understand his mother’s death, because he does not understand time.
Benjy is the Vardaman of The Sound and the Fury. Both boys are mentally incapable of comprehending death. They relate death to what they can understand. They take the truths from their realities and attempt to apply them to the realities of the rational reasoning world. Their memories are defined realities, but their perspective does not lie. It cannot lie, because it cannot know the truth. Courage Under Fire lets the storytellers know the truth. The only one uncertain is Rios. He is critically injured and can only recall the fire. He knows something happened, something horrific that should not have happened. He cringes and dopes up at the thought of it. He is the Benjy, the Vardaman, in the film. These realities come from perspectives, but the perspective is insufficient for truth. Serling cannot use the knowledge from Rios’s delusional groaning.
In film, the reality is not always created through memory or a specific character’s perspective. The director is the true storyteller in the film; the actors are merely his mouthpiece. In Apocalypse Now, Francis Coppola designs reality. He comments throughout the film similarly to Faulkner’s works and Courage Under Fire. The characters are not remembering a time or creating a reality per se,but rather are living in a created reality. In this reality the insane seem sane. Coppola creates a horror-filled reality. Kurtz’s monologue to Willard explains part of this reality. “It’s impossible for words to describe what is necessary to those who do not know what horror means. Horror … horror has a face … and you must make a friend of horror” (IMDB). This horror is the reality in which Kurtz lives. His perspective on life has substantially been tainted by the horrors of war. Thus the perspective that creates his reality is horror.
Absalom, Absalom! builds a story based upon perceptions. Shreve tries to recreate the reality of the South but cannot. He does not understand the setting. The time, manner, and place are foreign so his perceptions from Quentin are his only source of knowledge. When the two discuss Miss Rosa’s death, Shreve mistakenly calls her “Aunt Rosa,” which any southerner would align with a black woman, whereas the title “Miss” assumes a white southern lady. From Quentin’s stories, Shreve attempts to piece together information, to create the reality in which Quentin lives.
All right all right all right. –that this old—this Aunt R—all right all right all right all right. –that hadn’t been out there, hadn’t set foot in the house even in forty-three years, yet who not only said there was somebody hidden in it but found somebody that would believe her, would drive that twelve miles out there in a buggy at midnight to see if she was right or not? (Absalom 183).
Quentin has revealed truth to Shreve for his interpretation. There are truths and lies intermittently sprinkled throughout. Shreve is left with a chaotic jumble to sort. He tries to understand but cannot. The perspectives are not the same. Shreve will never be able to truly understand the southern aristocracy, just as Quentin will never be able to understand the southern flaw. The perception has created two realities, Quentin’s and Shreve’s. Both are based off the same information, but the foreknowledge each possess is vastly different. Each has a separate reality then, because each has interpreted the same scene differently.
Later, Mr. Compson describes a scene to Quentin. The actual scene is irrelevant; the importance comes in Quentin’s realization at the end. “…he could see it; he might even have been there. Then he thought No. If I had been there I could not have seen it this plain” (198). Quentin delights in the fabrication from his father. The scene is more spectacular and more detailed than anyone could understand. Mr. Compson’s memory created elements that did not exist. They glorified or debased elements, which changes the truth. But the truth isn’t necessary. At least the true truth isn’t necessary. The memory is truth. Truth describes reality. Reality is defined by the perception of the rational being in that moment.
I am the storyteller. In this reality, this creation of critical analysis and understanding I rule. Perception of events creates reality. Those events are of little importance; their interpretation is much more valuable. Faulkner gave me a commentary on time and the necessary knowledge to comprehend its importance. He also explained knowledge is not king; rather, the person holding the knowledge, the truth, is king. The ability to reason defines humans as rational beings, beings that are creators out of the sheer ability to create. Memory proves this facet of fiction. The god within the story chooses which elements to remember. The storyteller extols a fleeting moment, while nothing really happened but that memory is now a past reality. A past reality is truth. This idea of time relates only to the rationally acting person. If there is no element of time, then the fourth dimension can be ignored and events occur sporadically. The randomness of senses reflects the world outside of reason, outside of time.
Vardaman perceives his mother is a fish. She is a fish to him, because he cannot understand time and must relate his perceptions to his understanding of reality. Benjy likewise cannot comprehend age or time and reflects his knowledge through sensory feelings. Serling seeks the truth from a cast of people that has altered the truth, changing their memory, thus changing reality. The characters give him truth, their truth. He wants the real truth and is forced to dive into the past, to reveal the actual events. His initial perceptions support the created reality. He is outside of the event, outside of the timeline, and thus outside of the creation. It is not his reality but theirs. He forces a recounting of the tale where the focus shifts. The truth is never confirmed. No one actually knows what happened. The reader and the viewer assume that the author or director have given them the insider’s view, a view of the creation. There is no validation, however. The stories are there; the perceptions from differing characters reveal alternating realities. Perception is reality.
Works Cited
Cole, Peter. Radical Pragmatics. New York: Academic, 1981. Print.
Faulkner, William. Absalom, Absalom!: the Corrected Text. New York: Modern Library, 1993.
—. As I Lay Dying: the Corrected Text. New York: Modern Library, 2000.
—. The Sound and the Fury: the Corrected Text. New York: Vintage, 1990.
Handy, William J. “As I Lay Dying: Faulkner’s Inner Reporter.” JSTOR. The Kenyon Review, July-Aug. 1959. Web. 8 Dec. 2010.
IMDB. Apocalypse Now. Quotes. 8 Dec. 2010.
IMDB. Courage Under Fire. Quotes. 8 Dec. 2010.
Works Consulted
Ross, Stephen M. “‘Voice’ in Narrative Texts: The Example of As I Lay Dying.” JSTOR. PMLA, Mar. 1979. Web. 7 Dec. 2010.
The following article is an analysis of selections from The Liberal Imagination by Lionel Trilling, a collection of critical essays ranging from literature to psychology. The numbers indicate a separation between the different essays being analyzed.
1. “The Function of the Little Magazine” is an essay explaining how little magazines are the things in modern day culture which preserve our literature. This is because these magazines write for a small audience. This allows these magazines not to have to worry about offending people as much because their audience is more targeted. “…There exists a great gulf between our educated class and the best of our literature.” The reason Trilling makes this statement is because he believes the literature of his time has no energy or imagination. This leads to bad political ideals, and these ideals should be blamed on the education system.
The literature of today has picked up a bit more energy and imagination than before. One of the main reasons Trilling says literature is declining is because it has no political drive; it no longer inspires people. There have been people since Trilling’s time who have inspired people with literature. Glen Beck managed to basically start a whole new political party (The Tea Party) based off his writings. It is true there aren’t as many great authors to move people as there used to be, but society today does have more access to great literature than people of Trilling’s time. Society today has more conflict within modern day literature, which is a good thing: it inspires people to think more.
2. In the “Huckleberry Finn” essay, Trilling discusses how a boy views truth. “No one, as he (Mark Twain) well knew, sets a higher value on truth than a boy.” Trilling then goes on to explain truth to a young boy is the most important thing. This is because truth is always affiliated with fairness. A young boy will therefore not trust adults; a young boy believes adults lie all the time. Because they believe this, it makes it okay to lie to adults because they are liars.
This is a true statement; this is why Mark Twain chose to write Huckleberry Finn through the perspective of a young boy. It is how Mark Twain is able to make political statements. A boy will not hold back the truth because he wishes to express all of it. The truth is so important all of the truth must be expressed in the novel from the view of a boy. This means nothing should be held back, because truth must be fully understood.
3. In “The Sense of the Past,” Trilling states Shakespeare “is contemporaneous only if we know how much a man of his own age he was….” This statement is saying Shakespeare must be taken in context. No literary work can be understood out of context. One must understand times in which a literary work was written in order to understand its importance.
Context truly does shape a literary work. What might be considered daring or cutting edge today might be mediocre and mundane tomorrow. In order to understand how great something is one must understand the circumstances and times in which it was written. Any literary work, even the Bible for example, taken out of context can be misused and misinterpreted. For full understanding of a work, context is extremely important.
4. In “F. Scott Fitzgerald,” Trilling states Fitzgerald uses the ideal voice of the novelist in The Great Gatsby. Trilling believes the reason Fitzgerald’s use of language is so perfect is because of the emotion you feel with the characters. The language he uses adds a deepness and tone to each character. Fitzgerald has just the right amount of fact telling with emotional connection.
This truly is the ideal novelist voice. It is what grabs one in and makes one connected with the characters. If one does not connect with the characters, then the novel has no point, but if there is only the emotion of the characters then plot becomes rather dull. There must be a perfect mix; Fitzgerald masters this mix. It is often the subtlety of the language he uses that creates that mix. He uses soft words enough to make one connected but not overbearing with long dramatic description.
5. In “The Immortality Ode,” Trilling states “Criticism … must be concerned with the poem itself.” What he is saying is a poem should not be judged on details it may have left out. A poem should be judged only for the content in the poem, not the factuality behind it. With the first statement he rejects the view of criticizing poems based on the belief they in some way must be rooted in fact.
When Trilling then analyzes the poem, he contradicts himself and uses that same view. He brings in the idea a poem creates its own reality, therefore a poem cannot just be judged upon words but it must also be judged upon the world it creates. A poem may be based in reality, but it doesn’t need to be. A poem creates its own world with its own meaning. This world a poem creates can be criticized though, and should be for it is a part of the poem.
6. “Manners, Morals, and the Novel” is another Trilling essay that deals with context. Just as with “The Sense of the Past,”when one analyzes a literary work one must know the culture from which it came. Culture is extremely important in how one must interpret the work. A novel follows characters from a culture; in order to understand how characters interact with each, one must understand the culture. “The novel is a perpetual quest for reality, the field of its research being always the social world, the material of its analysis being always manners as the indication of a man’s soul.” Every literary work creates its own reality.
In the novel that reality is drawn from real culture. This is why a novel is a “perpetual quest for reality,” because a novel seeks to show some reality through the culture it represents. Novelists, even when writing science-fiction, will always bring aspects of their reality or their idea of reality in their novels. Novels must always convey the culture the novel takes place in, which is why it is a quest. The novelist must find the reality in which he wishes to set his novel and the reality he wishes to convey.