Flesh and Spirit in the Songs of Homer A Study of Words and Myths

Flesh and Spirit in the Songs of Homer A Study of Words and Myths

EnglishHardbackPrint on demand
Clarke, Michael
Oxford University Press
EAN: 9780198152637
Print on demand
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In the epics of Homer people experience emotions, carry out thought, express themselves, suffer death, and survive in a shadowy afterlife. When Homer describes these processes he reveals his sense of human identity; his conception of the self and its relation to the visible body. Despite many generations of study a fully satisfactory account of that conception has never been offered, partly because analyses of word-meanings, world-picture, and literary tradition have proceeded along separate paths. This book offers a newly integrated interpretation of Homeric man. The author starts with the working hypothesis that, in this poetry, the human being is not divided into two parts - inner and outer; body and soul; flesh and spirit - but stands as an indivisible unity. Thought and emotion are precisely the same as the movement of breath, blood, and fluids in the breast; the thinking self and the visible flesh are inextricably united, with no sense of man having either a mind or a body as a constituent part of himself; and at death the journey to the Underworld is fundamentally the same as the descent of the corpse into the soil. The last part of this analysis leads to a reassessment of the Homeric psuche, an entity which leaves the mouth at death and whose name is often misleadingly translated as soul. This study of the psuche leads to a new view of life in the Underworld, with wider implications for the study of the interrelation between myth, poetic narrative, and the meanings of early Greek words.
EAN 9780198152637
ISBN 0198152639
Binding Hardback
Publisher Oxford University Press
Publication date March 9, 2000
Pages 394
Language English
Dimensions 224 x 144 x 26
Country United Kingdom
Authors Clarke, Michael
Series Oxford Classical Monographs