Auteur(s) : Charles
SEGAL (Brown Univ., Providence, USA)
Titre : Kleos and its Ironies in the Odyssey
Revue : L’Antiquité Classique
Volume : 52
Date : 1983
Pages : 22-47
Abstract :
This study of the role of kleos, heroic fame, in the Odyssey
attempts to relate the anomalies in Odysseus’ heroism to the poem’s
self-consciousness about the epic singer and his song. This hero wins by guile
rather than force, conceals rather than proclaims his name, and in describing
his own deeds as past events already fixed as heroic tradition sings of his
own kleos, like a bard. His narration to the Pheacians, his meeting
with the Cyclops, and his restoration of festive song as at a wedding near the
end of the poem offer different models for the social function of song and memory.
The immobility and putrefaction associated with the Sirens are a negation of
the vital power of epic kleos to reach between living and dead. In
book XXIII Odysseus not only creates (or re-creates) kleos in words,
like a bard, but once more wins kleos as a hero who performs great
deeds. Even here, however, the unheroic elements, stressed in the second Nekyia,
leave Odysseus’ kleos surrounded by ambiguities and paradoxes.