Showing posts with label aphrodite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aphrodite. Show all posts

Friday, February 07, 2014

Eros, sophrosyne, myth and the Hippolytus

This group has completed its collective reading of the Hippolytus, so I'll post a few afterthoughts rather than continue with close readings of specific passages. As we turn to the Antigone of Sophocles, it might be worth a moment to look at the "raw material" of myth seized on by the Greek playwrights for their works.

For one thing, the material is hardly raw. The figures of Oedipus, Antigone, Hippolytus, Orestes, Philoctetes, Heracles, Dionysus, the Olympians and so many more are the legacy of a tradition formed, refined and elaborated over hundreds of years. Their stories involve families, cities, fabulous creatures, gods and nature, and situate themselves within a larger tapestry that could exfoliate into variations and permutations upon the tales already woven. Unlike, say, Old Testament stories that provoked infinite layers of commentary and interpretive creativity, but usually not literary variants or emulations, the Greek myths fueled and informed fresh literary and artistic works by generations of men at diverse historical moments.

Each moment found its form: for Pindar and Bacchylides, it was primarily the ode; for Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides, it was tragic drama; for Homer and Virgil, it was the epic; for Ovid, the old myths offered a shared language of figures, literary modes and structures -- a lens for thinking about culture, storytelling, history and literature with sophisticated panache.

Any particular myth came already bound within a much larger given body of tales -- elaborate genealogies of gods, cities, nature and men. Some were complex skeins tracing sacred blessings and curses down through generations of a family.

As we leave (close readers never say "finish") the Hippolytus and begin the Antigone it's noteworthy how the core myths are generative. They pose dense porcupine problems, labyrinthine knots. Unlike the detective tales of Law and Order or Sherlock Holmes, they resist resolving into neat sums through logical agility or dogged scientific lab work. The audience leaves with no sense of mastery, no comfort of closure; instead, if anything, it's experienced a kind of intimate acquaintance with intolerable tensions.

Aphrodite
The same antagonisms operative at the opening of Hippolytus are there at the close. Even as the characters turn in agonized perplexity asking why certain destinies have come to them, the audience is spared any such questioning. We get the god's eye view of the matter at the very beginning with Aphrodite's prologue. There's no suspense about what will happen, no mystery as to why it's happening. All the "hooks" and plot devices constitutive of much modern storytelling are tossed aside. What motivates us to stay with such a story? Why go to the theater?

Let's suggest that one way of looking at the Hippolytus is as a struggle between eros and sophrosyne -- an oversimplification for the sake of argument. We might at first think about this rather abstractly, and rather limitedly, as the eternal agon of passion and reason, the power of desire versus the ability of the self to know and govern its realm -- all of which it most certainly is. What the play does, in virtually every line, every turn of plot, every speech and response, is offer deeper, richer, more comprehensive and more granular perspectives upon that inherent conflict. Drawn along by the action, we gather the implications of the mythos, and grapple with its complications.

Perhaps we acquire a more complex sense of the nature of love and the astonishing range of its effects. The shaft that leaps from eros' bow to Phaedra's heart to Theseus's pain and rage to the entangled death of the future hero-king is intensified and enriched through the prism of each character's acts and interactions.

Artemis
Perhaps we gather a deeper sense of the strategies of self-possession available to us -- from the curious rapture of Hippolytus to the devious authority of Phaedra to the "laid back" approach of the Nurse.  Are these viable solutions or illusory accommodations? Nothing is quite what we would decree as the ideal for our prim and proper world. Turn to the virginal opponent of eros and you find an arrow coming the other way. No simple, clear, coherent solution to the war of eros and sophrosyne stands readily at hand.

The play doesn't ignore the realm of the polis. At the moment he covers his son's face, Theseus says:

 κλείν᾽ Ἀθῆναι Παλλάδος θ᾽ ὁρίσματα,
1460οἵου στερήσεσθ᾽ ἀνδρός.
Glorious Athens, Pallas' realm,
what a man you have been bereft of!
The line grows in power if we remember that this was the father who had seen his son first as a bookish self-indulgent child, then as a fiendishly deceitful rapist, but never as a man -- a man worthy of the admiration of Theseus, the greatest Athenian hero. The scene gains more yet if we happen to catch, only here, the shadow of Athena in the bottomless awareness of the loss to Athens in the untimely, undeserved, incommensurable death of this man.

==========

Shortly before dying, Hippolytus calls on Zeus:

Ζεῦ Ζεῦτάδ᾽ ὁρᾷς;
ὅδ᾽  σεμνὸς ἐγὼ καὶ θεοσέπτωρ,
1365ὅδ᾽  σωφροσύνῃ πάντας ὑπερσχών,
προῦπτον ἐς Ἅιδην στείχωκατ᾽ ἄκρας
ὀλέσας βίοτονμόχθους δ᾽ ἄλλως
τῆς εὐσεβίας
εἰς ἀνθρώπους ἐπόνησα.
Zeus, Zeus, do you mark this? Here am I, the holy and god-revering one, the man who surpassed all men in σωφροσύνῃ [self-control, temperance], seeing plainly ahead my course to Hades. My life is utterly destroyed; useless have been my hard labors of piety towards men.
He calls upon Zeus, but he might as well address us, the audience, we are on the level of the gods even as we see ourselves in the dying hero. The death he now foresees is the death Aphrodite foretold to us at the beginning. Theater as theoria. The strangeness of a day in which the lives of three great ones (μεγάλων) are lost and a nascent civilization careens off course under the serene sky and eye of Zeus doesn't get less enigmatic, but rather more, on closer scrutiny. Deeper insight into the struggle of eros and sophrosyne provides no practical nostrum with which we could build an optimistic program (e.g., the "power of positive thinking") for a better tomorrow.

This mode of myth is unlike what's meant when we say "myth" today --  a story that we think some deluded folks believe, but which others, namely we sage ones, know to be untrue. We have the closure and managerial composure to rest assured we know better.

When a noted historian recently was asked what he thought was the "most damaging myth in America today," his response was, "the idea of American exceptionalism."

Unlike the tale of, say, Thebes, exceptionalism yields little upon reflection; it's an idle phantasm at the farthest remove from myth. Myths don't pretend to solve our problems -- they are our problems, knots torn from the world's heart, made incandescently palpable to a certain ungrasping contemplation.


Saturday, January 25, 2014

Enter Artemis

Bridging the last scene and the Epilogue is this final paean to Aphrodite -- it repeats the theme of the power of Cypris and her son from earlier odes, but is relatively brief:

Χορός
σὺ τὰν θεῶν ἄκαμπτον φρένα καὶ βροτῶν
ἄγειςΚύπρισὺν δ᾽
1270 ποικιλόπτερος ἀμφιβαλὼν
ὠκυτάτῳ πτερῷ.
ποτᾶται δὲ γαῖαν εὐάχητόν θ᾽
ἁλμυρὸν ἐπὶ πόντον,
θέλγει δ᾽ Ἔρως  μαινομένᾳ κραδίᾳ
1275πτανὸς ἐφορμάσῃ χρυσοφαής,
φύσιν ὀρεσκόων σκύμνων πελαγίων θ᾽
ὅσα τε γᾶ τρέφει
τά τ᾽ αἰθόμενος ἅλιος δέρκεται,
1280ἄνδρας τεσυμπάντων βασιληίδα τι-
μάνΚύπριτῶνδε μόνα κρατύνεις.

Chorus 
You carry along the unyielding hearts of the immortals, Aphrodite, and the hearts of men, and with you is he of the many-colored wings, surrounding them with his swift pinions. Eros flies over the earth and over the loud-roaring salt sea and bewitches the one on whose frenzied mind he darts, winged and gold-gleaming, he bewitches the whelps of the mountain and those of the sea, what the earth brings forth and what the blazing sun looks down upon, [1280] and likewise mortal men. Over all these, Aphrodite, you alone hold your honored sway.

Epilogue

Artemis 

Artemis

Before even discussing what she says, note that Artemis appears precisely as the chorus sings the  final words of its ode to Aphrodite. The seeming totality of 


Alone you rule

is challenged and offset by the entrance of a goddess who seems to embody everything Aphrodite is not. 

The dialectical movement of the action subverts the totalizing worldview of the characters and the chorus, even as the entrance of Artemis structurally balances that of Aphrodite. The opening of the Epilogue reflects the opening of the Prologue, producing a theatrical symmetry that could reflect a world alive with dynamic tension between opposing powers. Whether the vision of the play can be reduced to this duality remains to be explored.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Common sense from the common man

Just prior to the Epilogue, the messenger has just finished his tale of Hippolytus's crash. He then appends his own opinion that the boy was never guilty of what he stood accused of:
I am, I know, a slave of your house, my lord, [1250] but I shall never have the strength to believe that your son was guilty, not even if the whole female sex should hang themselves and fill with writing all the pine-wood that grows upon Mount Ida. For I know that he was good.
Structurally this advice to a lord from a servant echoes the advice in scene 1, when Hippolytus is advised in a curiously Socratic manner to give Aphrodite her due.

Servant
Lord [ἄναξ]—for it is as gods that one should address one's masters—would you take a piece of good advice from me?
Hippolytus
[90] Most certainly. Else I should not seem wise [σοφοὶ].
Servant
The rule observed by mortals—do you know it?
Hippolytus
No. What is the law you question me about?
Servant
To hate what's haughty [σεμνὸν] and not friend to all.
Hippolytus
And rightly. Who that's haughty gives no pain?
Servant
[95] And is there charm in affability? [εὐπροσήγορος]
Hippolytus
Yes, much, and profit too with little toil.
Servant
Do you think the same is true among the gods?
Hippolytus
Yes, if we humans follow heavenly usage.

Epidaurus 
Servant
How then no word for a high and mighty [σεμνὴνgoddess?
Hippolytus
[100] Which? Careful lest your tongue commit some slip. [σφαλῇ] 
Servant
pointing to the statue of Aphrodite
The goddess here, who stands beside your gate.
Hippolytus
I greet her from afar, for I am pure [ἁγνὸς].
Servant
Yet she's revered [σεμνήand famous among mortals.
Hippolytus
I do not like a god worshipped at night.
Servant
[107] My son, to honor the gods is only just.
Hippolytus
Men have their likes, in gods and men alike.
Servant
I wish you fortune—and the good sense [νοῦν] you need!
Hippolytus then gives some commands to his servants and blithely bids Aphrodite goodbye:
Hippolytus 
As for your Aphrodite, I bid her a very good day!
The servant then turns to the statue and -- this might have occasioned some levity in the audience -- offers the goddess another dollop of his free advice:

χρὴ δὲ συγγνώμην ἔχειν:
εἴ τίς σ᾽ ὑφ᾽ ἥβης σπλάγχνον ἔντονον φέρων
μάταια βάζειμὴ δόκει τούτων κλύειν.
120σοφωτέρους γὰρ χρὴ βροτῶν εἶναι θεούς.
You should be forgiving: if youth makes someone's heart stiff with pride and he utters folly, pretend not to hear him. [120] For gods should be wiser than mortals.
Marvelously, forbearance tiptoes in. The word the servant uses is συγγνώμην -- leniency, allowance, fellow-feelingful judgment, shared mind.  It's the very word Artemis will use when she speaks that crucial line to the crushed Theseus in the Epilogue:

δείν᾽ ἔπραξαςἀλλ᾽ ὅμως
ἔτ᾽ ἔστι καί σοι τῶνδε συγγνώμης τυχεῖν(1326-27)
You have done dreadful deeds, but for all that it is still possible for you to win pardon for these things. 
The Servant and the Messenger speak up, just as the Nurse did -- Euripides clearly wasn't a hard and fast believer in an aristocracy of common sense.

I have another point jumping off from here, but this post is long enough. Another will follow.

Thursday, October 03, 2013

Lair of silent women: Hippolytus's ideal polis

Theseus captures the Bull of Marathon

As Hippolytus unfolds his "argument" regarding women (Hipp. 616-668) -- how if he were Zeus, he'd delete them from human procreation; how they drain their fathers and their husbands, who spend down their wealth adorning these "statues" (ἄγαλμα), he then goes on to offer a singular word picture of how things would stand in his ideal republic:
[645] One ought to let no slave pass in to see a woman. Rather one should companion them with wild and brute beasts so that they would be unable either to speak to anyone or to be spoken to in return. 
But as things are, the wicked ones plot evil [650] within doors, and their servants carry their plans abroad. 
χρῆν δ᾽ ἐς γυναῖκα πρόσπολον μὲν οὐ περᾶν, ἄφθογγα δ᾽ αὐταῖς συγκατοικίζειν δάκηθηρῶν, ἵν᾽ εἶχον μήτε προσφωνεῖν τιναμήτ᾽ ἐξ ἐκείνων φθέγμα δέξασθαι πάλιν.
νῦν δ᾽ αἱ μὲν ἔνδονδρῶσιν αἱ κακαὶκακὰ βουλεύματ᾽, ἔξω δ᾽ ἐκφέρουσιπρόσπολοι.
It's a remarkable bit of poli-sci phantasmagoria: In the ideal city of Hippolytus, women would be kept within. But not simply consigned to the house and away from the realm of public affairs, because that alone would not solve the main problem women present: their power of speech. Woman as the locus of rampant, uncontrollable desire must be prevented from uttering, i.e., outering, her desire. To imprison them and make them literally unspeakable, Hippolytus offers his novel proposal -- worthy, indeed, of Swift's well-intentioned modest Proposer -- that all women be held in solitary confinement, companioned solely by dangerous, biting (δάκη) animals that are ἄφθογγα - "voiceless."
ἄφθογγα δ᾽ αὐταῖς συγκατοικίζειν δάκηθηρῶν
This hyperbolic concept sits strangely alongside the verb συγκατοικίζειν, which carries the sense of colonizing, establishing jointly, a means of living together. It's a perfect word for one attempting to think of how cities, neighbors, even kingdoms can form civil bonds in a world of competition, limited resources, and different values and gods.

Hippolytus is in fact using a term of ancient political theory that was associated with his father, Theseus, from an early time: Synoikismos (Synoecism):
Synoecism  Ancient GreekσυνοικισμóςsunoikismosAncient Greek: [syːnɔi̯kismós]), also spelled synoikism (/sɨˈnɔɪkɪzəm/ si-noy-kiz-əm), was originally the amalgamation of villages in Ancient Greece into poleis, or city-states. Etymologically the word means "dwelling together (syn) in the same house (oikos)." Subsequently any act of civic union between polities of any size was described by the word synoikismos
In a way, Theseus was the hero who fostered the idea of alliances, marriages, between political entities, just as he sought to bridge and unite Crete and Athens in marrying Phaedra.

By having Hippolytus echo the language of his father's inclusive political vision even as he is in fact describing a mode of exclusion that divorces womankind from all human intercourse, a dimension of irony is introduced that seems almost Swiftian in its incisive power. If like Hippolytus's devoted friends we were to envision a city in which men meet and conduct their lives while women are relegated to a lair of violent beasts, we are looking at a very strange city indeed.

It's only possible to fully appreciate how far this political vision is from even his own chosen form of life if we remember how Hippolytus spends his days. Far from the city, he loves to hunt in the wild. Aphrodite gives us a picture of him early in her opening speech:
In the green wood, ever consort to the maiden goddess, he clears the land of wild beasts with his swift dogs, and has gained a companionship greater than mortal.
χλωρὰν δ᾽ ἀν᾽ ὕλην παρθένῳ ξυνὼν ἀεὶκυσὶν ταχείαις θῆρας ἐξαιρεῖ χθονός,μείζω βροτείας προσπεσὼν ὁμιλίας.
The roving life of Artemis, free from all allegiance to men, to sexual desire and procreation, is the energetic hunting and killing of wild animals -- the triumph of sheer negative power over uncivilized creatures. Here, though, we find Hippolytus reversing all that: Coming full circle, he ends by introducing wild beasts into the heart of the polis itself, summoned into service to roam between the lips of women and the ears of anyone who might hear. The problem of women is "solved" through the complete suppression of their voice.

Nothing could be farther from Aphrodite and Artemis than this bizarre version of rus in urbe. Nor is it something to which Hippolytus's Amazonian mother was likely to have given her blessing.

Hippolytus here verges on becoming a satirical target, but the effect is passing, momentary. It's as if a door onto an engulfing possibility of dizzying irony and negation opens, then shuts. One wonders if Aristophanes' literary attacks on Euripides might not have been provoked by a certain envy, the sensing of a comedic savagery a bowshot beyond his own.


Theseus kills the Minotaur