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3.6.1: Homer and Hesiod

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    279493
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    The temptation to situate these two influential authors as adversaries plays into neurological literary theory, specifically our primitive desire to find two mighty deities, or forces, in diametrical opposition. Comparisons and contrasts are primarily useful when they elicit meaningful data or conclusions. As their approaches to the literature differ, we’re gifted with views of the ancient world that are more complex and more complete.

    In the introduction to her translation of the Theogony, Wender compared the gods of Homer to those of Hesiod. Although Homer's Olympians may not have been ethical standard bearers–they lied, cheated, and stole–they were still civilized. Homer ignored their sins without mention of any "primitive behavior." However, Hesiod made no effort to "whitewash the mythological past in terms of modern standards with one exception. The exception is Zeus, the hero of the poem, whose omniscience, power and justice are stressed at every opportunity," along with the intensity “of primitive gods and chaotic forces” that mark his dramatic style (17). Homer's epics were written for an upper-class audience while Hesiod's works were more pedestrian, accessible to a broader audience.


    3.6.1: Homer and Hesiod is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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