
The Odyssey, part 2: Failsons and deadbeat dads
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
Acerca de esta escucha
This week we finally shut up about translations and get into some juicy themes and character analysis.
Telemachus: why is he such a dweeb compared to his dad? Rich argues that he's doing the best he can growing up with an absent father. The others are less sympathetic.
Odysseus: is his paranoid murderous rampage justified? what are his singular heroic attributes? Is he portrayed more as admirable or a hubristic figure? Why won't his men obey him?
On homecoming: Why was Odysseus away for so long? Was he kinda dragging his heels on the return voyage? How much strange was he getting? What motivated him to finally come home?
The Ancient Greek marshmallow test: exploring the recurring themes of self-denial, time preference, binding mechanisms, and whether playing the long game could arguably be the central theme of the whole poem.
CHAPTERS
- (00:00:00) Telemachus the failson
- (00:19:39) why the poem spends so much time on household politics
- (00:29:31) Bronze Age morality redux: what have we learned?
- (00:36:28) The Ancient Greek Marshmallow Test
- (00:45:12) Odysseus’ slow homecoming
- (00:57:04) Godhood and rat bastard cunning
- (01:13:07) Suitor slaughtering time
- (01:17:25) Final thoughts on Odysseus and bronze age heroism
- (01:32:48) Listener mailbag and next book announcement
WRITE US:
We love listener feedback. Send us a note at douevenlit@gmail.com to correct our bad takes, add your own, or just say hi.
NEXT ON THE READING LIST:
- White Noise - Don DeLillo