Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 192
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7425-6596-8 • Paperback • October 2008 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
978-0-7425-6597-5 • eBook • October 2008 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Seth Benardete was professor of classics at New York University. He was the author of The Being of the Beautiful, The Rhetoric of Morality and Philosophy, Socrates' Second Sailing, and The Tragedy and Comedy of Life.
Chapter 1 Notice to the Reader
Chapter 2 Preface
Part 3 Part I: The Beginnings
Chapter 4 Theodicy
Chapter 5 Politics
Chapter 6 Telemachus
Part 7 Part II: Pattern and Will
Chapter 8 Nestor
Chapter 9 Helen and Menelaus
Part 10 Part III: Odysseus' Choice
Part 11 Part IV: Among the Phaeacians
Chapter 12 Shame
Chapter 13 Paradise
Chapter 14 Pride
Part 15 Part V: Odysseu' Own Story
Chapter 16 Memory and Mind
Chapter 17 Nature
Chapter 18 Hades
Chapter 19 Destiny
Part 20 Part VI: Odysseus' Lies
Part 21 Part VII: Nonfated Things
Chapter 22 Theoclymenus and Eumaeus
Chapter 23 The Slave Girls
Chapter 24 The Name and the Scar
Part 25 Part VIII: The Suitors and the City
Chapter 26 The Suitors
Chapter 27 The City
Part 28 Part IX: Recognition
Chapter 29 Penelope
Chapter 30 Hades
Chapter 31 Laertes
Chapter 32 Notes
Chapter 33 Index
Guided by the fundamental problems opened up through his studies of the Platonic dialogues, Seth Benardete unravels the intertwined threads of Homer's Odyssey and finds at its core the choice Odysseus makes to be human—to return home rather than accept Calypso's offer of immortality. This choice reflects the understanding Odysseus has of his fate, on which the Olympian gods have in turn imposed a design of their own, assigning Odysseus a part in their plan of withdrawal. Once home, Odysseus strings his bow and makes it sing, Homer tells us, as easily as a bard his lyre; but whether the apparent fusion of rationality with spiritedness in the soul of Odysseus allows him to share Homer's perspective is the Platonic question that animates Benardete's penetrating and illuminating reading of the Odyssey.
— Ronna Burger, Tulane University
The Bow and the Lyre is a work of matchless erudition and insight.
— Harvey C. Mansfield, Harvard University
Bernardete's procedure frees him to take seriously the problems of the surface on their own terms.
— Martin Sitte, New York, NY; Albert E. Gunn and Staff
The Bow and the Lyre is a treasure of startling observations, but it is also much more. His book is a remarkable account of the Odyssey . . . There is really nothing else like it in print.
— Michael Davis, Sarah Lawrence College