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The Penelopiad The Myth Of Penelope And Odysseus 1st Edition Margaret Atwood

  • SKU: BELL-47413060
The Penelopiad The Myth Of Penelope And Odysseus 1st Edition Margaret Atwood
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The Penelopiad The Myth Of Penelope And Odysseus 1st Edition Margaret Atwood instant download after payment.

Publisher: Vintage Canada
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1.82 MB
Pages: 111
Author: Margaret Atwood
ISBN: 9780753176320, 9780739467565, 0753176327, 0739467565
Language: English
Year: 2003
Edition: 1

Product desciption

The Penelopiad The Myth Of Penelope And Odysseus 1st Edition Margaret Atwood by Margaret Atwood 9780753176320, 9780739467565, 0753176327, 0739467565 instant download after payment.

The internationally acclaimed Myths series brings together some of the finest writers of our time to provide a contemporary take on some of our most enduring stories. Here, the timeless and universal tales that reflect and shape our lives–mirroring our fears and desires, helping us make sense of the world–are revisited, updated, and made new.

Margaret Atwood’s *Penelopiadis a sharp, brilliant and tender revision of a story at the heart of our culture: the myths about Penelope and Odysseus. In Homer’s familiar version, *The Odyssey, Penelope is portrayed as the quintessential faithful wife. Left alone for twenty years when Odysseus goes to fight in the Trojan Wars, she manages to maintain the kingdom of Ithaca, bring up her wayward son and, in the face of scandalous rumours, keep over a hundred suitors at bay. When Odysseus finally comes home after enduring hardships, overcoming monsters and sleeping with goddesses, he kills Penelope’s suitors and–curiously–twelve of her maids.

In Homer the hanging of the maids merits only a fleeting though poignant mention, but Atwood comments in her introduction that she has always been haunted by those deaths. The Penelopiad, she adds,begins with two questions: what led to the hanging of the maids, and what was Penelope really up to? In the book, these subjects are explored by Penelope herself–telling the story from Hades — the Greek afterworld - in wry, sometimes acid tones. But Penelope’s maids also figure as a singing and dancing chorus (and chorus line), commenting on the action in poems, songs, an anthropology lecture and even a videotaped trial.

The Penelopiad does several dazzling things at once. First, it delves into a moment of casual brutality and reveals all that the act contains: a practice of sexual violence and gender prejudice our society has not outgrown. But it is also a daring interrogation of Homer’s poem, and its counter-narratives — which draw on mythic material not used by Homer - cleverly unbalance the origin

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