The Negative Banquet of Odysseus and The
The Negative Banquet of Odysseus and The
The Negative Banquet of Odysseus and The
John Dayton
Abstract
Banquet scenes abound in Homers Odyssey and they contribute significantly to a
sense of human community by engendering bonds of guest and host (xenia) and the
virtues of sharing, equality, and moderation; in the encounters between Odysseus
and alien peoples, the type of food and the means of taking it serve as a touchstone
for civilized life. Another theme is the conflict of humans with the barbarism of
nature, as in the central encounter between Odysseus men and the Cyclops
Polyphemus, which presents a conflict between civilized humanity and a
subhuman culture trapped in a primitive pastoral stage, narrated through the
medium of a perverted banquet ritual. The conflict is expressed through a set of
dichotomies: wine, the beverage of settled life vs. milk, the drink of nomadic
barbarism; community vs. antisocial isolation; self-control vs. drunkenness and
gluttony; wits vs. brute strength; xenia vs. cannibalism. The last theme merits
special attention as the cannibalism taboo is strong in Greek culture, as mythology
attests, and wherever cannibalism emerges it represents a blasphemous inversion of
xenia and/or a regression to primal chaos. The Cyclops, a shepherd subsisting on
milk and cheese, enacts a parody of the feasting rites in which he dines alone rather
than sharing with his visitors, he literally dines on his visitors rather than feeding
them, and then makes a mockery of the guests and hosts exchange of gifts. But
the Cyclops lacks one crucial quality which distinguishes men from children or
savages: self-control, sophrosyne. His heedless swillage of the choice wine which
Odysseus has given him effectively emasculates him and allows Odysseus and his
crew to defeat him by planning and teamwork. In this exemplary clash of mankind
with its barbaric negative image, the former has won through community,
intelligence, and self-control, all virtues fostered and strengthened by the shared
meal, one of the most exemplary scenes in Homers Odyssey.
Key Words: Homer, epic hero, Odyssey, Odysseus, feast, xenia, Cyclops,
Polyphemus.
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But you see that Hesiods golden race dwell with their sheep in prelapsarian bliss,
undefiled and righteous. In Hesiods version the appearance of technology in the
later bronze and iron ages brings corresponding moral deterioration. This
idealization of primitivism also runs very deep in Classical thought and is still with
us, inspiring most Utopian thought. You can easily see the kinship of the Cyclopes
to the Golden Race, but you can just as easily see the difference here the children
of nature are not supernally serene and righteous but crude, bestial and malign.
This tale seems to me very much a refutation of the Golden Age orthodoxy
which was its close contemporary.
To my knowledge the contrast of the myth of Odysseus and the Cyclops with
those of Prometheus and the Golden Age has not been appreciated before, and is so
specific that it seems to me deliberate, but its not customary to speak of intentional
John Dayton 7
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thematic choices when were dealing with oral epic. The Odyssey may be
somewhat younger than the Iliad or Hesiod and further out of the so called Dark
Ages, and it may simply represent a greater positivism toward progress and less
preference for ancient days. It definitely celebrates current human accomplishment
and the present and perhaps even the future much more that do its predecessors
(the Iliad for example shows an archaizing tendency completely absent from the
Odyssey).
But as for the Cyclops tale, it celebrates civilized man and society. In this
exemplary clash of humanity with savagery, the former has won through superior
community, intelligence, and self-control. These are all the virtues fostered and
strengthened by the shared meal, one of the most frequent and most exemplary
scenes in Homers Odyssey.
Notes
1
Book 9, Chapter 5
2
John Dayton, Food and Civilized Society in the Homeric Epics, in Food: Expressions and Impressions, ed. Don
Sanderson and Mira Crouch (Oxford: Inter-Disciplinary Press, 2013), 31-45.
3
Homer, Odyssey 3.34-42 (all Odyssey translations in notes are by A.S. Kline,
<http://www.poetryintranslation.com/PITBR/Greek/Odhome.htm>.)
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But when they saw the strangers, they crowded round them, clasped their hands in welcome, begging them to be seated.
Nestors son, Peisistratus, was first to approach and took them both by the hand, and made them sit on soft fleeces spread on
the sand, beside his father, and brother, Thrasymedes, so they could feast. Having done so, he served them inner portions,
poured wine in a golden cup, and drinking her health, spoke to Pallas Athene, the aegis-bearing daughter of Zeus . . .
4
Odyssey 9.109-566
5
9.116-124, 131-35
6
9.106-129
7
9.106-15, 125-9
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(We) came to the land of the Cyclopes, a lawless, aggressive people, who never lift their hands to plant or plough, but rely
on the immortal gods. Wheat, barley, and vines with their richly clustered grapes, grow there without ploughing or sowing,
and rain from Zeus makes them flourish. The Cyclopes have no council meetings, no code of law, but live in echoing caves
on the mountain slopes, and each man lays down the law to his wives and children, and disregards his neighbours . . . The
Cyclopes have no vessels with crimson-painted prows, no shipwrights to build sound boats with oars, to meet their need and
let them travel to other mens cities, as other races visit each other over the sea in ships.
8
9.175-6
9
9.39-61
10
9.208-11
11
9.216-223
12
9.266-271
13
9.115
14
9.316-335
15
9.370
16
P. Winston Fettner, Preparations for a Structuralist Study of Cannibalism in Greek Myth,
<http://www.academia.edu/956356/_Preparations_for_a_Structuralist_Study_of_Cannibalism_in_Greek_Myth_>.5.
17
9.373.4
18
9.408-12
19
Jean-Pierre Vernant, Myth and Society in Ancient Greece, trans. Janet Lloyd (New York: Zone Books, 1996) 183-202.
20
Works and Days 109-123:
Bibliography
John Dayton, Food and Civilized Society in the Homeric Epics, in Food: Expressions and Impressions, ed. Don Sanderson
and Mira Crouch (Oxford: Inter-Disciplinary Press, 2013), 31-45.
P. Winston Fettner, Preparations for a Structuralist Study of Cannibalism in Greek Myth. Viewed 14 December 2013.
<http://www.academia.edu/956356/_Preparations_for_a_Structuralist_Study_of_Cannibalism_in_Greek_Myth_>.
Jean-Pierre Vernant, Myth and Society in Ancient Greece, trans. Janet Lloyd (New York: Zone Books, 1996).
John Dayton has a doctorate in Classics from Brown University and is currently Associate Professor in English at the
Rochester Institute of Technology, Dubai. He is the author of The Athletes of War: An Evaluation of the Agonistic
Elements in Greek Warfare (Toronto: Edgar Kent, 2006).