preview

Truth In Homer's The Penelopiad

Good Essays

When stories are told, no matter who the narrator is, their testimonies always differ from the truth. We see this in eyewitness accounts of crimes where witnesses typically fail to accurately recall events of the crime. Furthermore, we see this in stories, specifically, ones with first-person narration. In these stories, the limited knowledge of the narrator and their biases causes them to bend the truth leaving readers questioning what the actual truth is. To find out the truth, multiple perspectives are required before conclusions can be drawn. Author Margaret Atwood recognized this flaw in Homer’s Odyssey, which neglected to build upon characters such as Penelope, ultimately prompting her to write The Penelopiad, a story about Penelope’s …show more content…

The novella is written from the perspective of Penelope, wife of Odysseus, as she narrates her experiences during the events of The Iliad and The Odyssey. The narration she provides is retrospective as reflects on her past life from the afterlife in an attempt to dispel the many preconceived notions that exist about her and those closest to her. For example, in the first few pages of the novella, Penelope openly questioned the legitimacy of Odysseus’s own journey. She tells the reader that, “He [Odysseus] was always so plausible. Many people have believed that his version of events was the true one… Even I believed him, from time to time. I knew he was tricky and a liar. Hadn’t I been faithful?” (Atwood, 2). She is confused that, as a known liar, how Odysseus’s hold academic merit today. She is haunted by his lies. Even from the moment their first night together as a couple, she commented that “...the way Odysseus told the story made me suspect there was more to it” (Atwood, 47). This deceit she noticed continued to permeate throughout her marriage, telling the reader that, “The two of us were...proficient and shameless liars of long standing. It was a wonder either of us believed a word the other said. But we did. Or so we told each other” (Atwood, 173). In The Odyssey, we see that Penelope depicted as an incredibly loyal wife and nothing else; there is no depth to her character. The Penelopiad reveals that she is cunning and deeply scarred emotionally as a character an aspect not explored by Homer due to the insignificant role of women during ancient Greece. The telling of this story from the perspective of Penelope serves to provide a viewpoint not explored in Homer’s Odyssey due to the patriarchal society of Greece. Atwood’s use of the first-person allowing a suppressed character to have a voice as she tells her side of the

Get Access