
Contents
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Priam’s and Hekabe’s Desires Priam’s and Hekabe’s Desires
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Andromache’s Melancholic Mourning Andromache’s Melancholic Mourning
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Achilleus’ Persistent Mourning Achilleus’ Persistent Mourning
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Approaching the End Approaching the End
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Resolutions of Desire Resolutions of Desire
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Audience (Dis)satisfaction Audience (Dis)satisfaction
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Cite
Abstract
This last chapter demonstrates how newly conceived Trojan desires together with Achilleus’ existing desires prolong the Iliad’s narrative and keep the audience engaged until they are remediated in Book 24. Hektor’s killing arouses the Trojan royal family’s longing for their lost champion, and in their desirous anguish, Priam, Hekabe, and Andromache attract the audience’s sympathy and empathy, complicating and extending our investment in the epic. Though Achilleus celebrates Patroklos’ funeral, his aggressive attachment to Hektor’s corpse keeps both himself and the Trojans from satisfying their yearning (himeros) or lust (erōs) for lamentation (goos) and relieving their underlying longings, and establishes a final triangle of desire with Priam as subject, Hektor as object, and himself as rival. This chapter explains how Priam’s supplication of Achilleus in the Iliad’s final book resolves the desires of both the Greek hero and the Trojans, and how the poem’s closing scenes gratify the audience, even as they also provoke our desire for more epic narrative.
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