Susie Berta

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The poet of the Odyssey, by contrast, doesn’t seem to care particularly about where his epic ought to begin. He asks the Muse to begin telling her story at “some point or another,” hamothen—anywhere in Odysseus’ journey that suits her. But hamothen also has a temporal overtone: “from some point in time or another,” “at any random moment in the narrative.” In the Odyssey’s opening lines, space and time are themselves suggestively vague, indistinct from each other. This strangely tentative careering between concrete specifics and unhelpful generalities gives you a familiar feeling: the feeling ...more
An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic
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