Penelope's Renown
eBook - PDF

Penelope's Renown

Meaning and Indeterminacy in the Odyssey

  1. 236 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Penelope's Renown

Meaning and Indeterminacy in the Odyssey

About this book

Noted for her contradictory words and actions, Penelope has been a problematic character for critics of the Odyssey, many of whom turn to psychological explanations to account for her behavior. In a fresh approach to the problem, Marylin Katz links Penelope closely with the strategies that govern the overall design of the narrative. By examining its apparent inconsistencies and its deferral of truth and closure, she shows how Penelope represents the indeterminacy that is characteristic of the narrative as a whole. Katz argues that the controlling narrative device of the poem is the paradigm of Agamemnon's fateful return from the Trojan War, narrated in the opening lines of the Odyssey. This story operates not only as a point of reference for Odysseus' homecoming but also as an alternative plot, and the danger that Penelope will betray Odysseus as Clytemnestra did Agamemnon is kept alive throughout the first half of the poem. Once Odysseus reaches Ithaca, however, the paradigm of Helen's faithlessness substitutes for that of Clytemnestra. The narrative structure of the Odyssey is thus based upon an intratextual revision of its own paradigm, through which the surface meaning of Penelope's words and actions is undermined though never openly discredited.

Originally published in 1991.

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Yes, you can access Penelope's Renown by Marylin A. Katz in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Ancient & Classical Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Preface
  4. Glossary of Greek Terms
  5. 1. Indeterminancy and Interpretation
  6. 2. The Construction of Absence (Books 1—4, 11)
  7. 3. Coming Home/Going Home (Books 13, 15, 16)
  8. 4. What Does Penelope Want? (Books 18, 19)
  9. 5. The Construction of Presence (Books 17-21)
  10. 6. Duplicity, Indeterminacy, and the Ideology of Exclusivity (Book 23)
  11. Conclusion Indeterminacy in the Odyssey
  12. Bibliography
  13. Index Locorum
  14. General Index