Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Rescrieri feminine ale Odiseii (2): Madeline Miller, Circe
View through CrossRef
In her novel, Madeline Miller proposes reconstructing Circe’s legends from classical sources by offering a feminine, even feminist, perspective on events. In the protagonist’s account, the witch’s history appears as a delineation from the despotic deities and a way of coming closer to the mortals which ultimately ammounts to abandoning her own condition. The central part of the novel starts from the story of Odissey and continues with events narrated in Telegony, poem which was dedicated to the son of Odysseus and Circe who unwillingly became the killer of his father. Although she follows the Homeric narrative in detail, the author sometimes relates critically to the literary model. The events told by Odysseus and Circe in a heroic or debunking form reveal their polivalence. In the extension of the Homeric narrative, the last part of the novel encompasses the events that occurred after the return to Itaca of Odysseus, unable to find fulfillment on his native lands because of his thirst for the unknown and adventures. The hero’s image gradually darkens, the author accentuating his violence or his generalized suspicion. Reconstructing the events from Circe’s perspective allows Madeline Miller to delineate from the Odyssey which she has followed scrupulously up to a certain point.
Title: Rescrieri feminine ale Odiseii (2): Madeline Miller, Circe
Description:
In her novel, Madeline Miller proposes reconstructing Circe’s legends from classical sources by offering a feminine, even feminist, perspective on events.
In the protagonist’s account, the witch’s history appears as a delineation from the despotic deities and a way of coming closer to the mortals which ultimately ammounts to abandoning her own condition.
The central part of the novel starts from the story of Odissey and continues with events narrated in Telegony, poem which was dedicated to the son of Odysseus and Circe who unwillingly became the killer of his father.
Although she follows the Homeric narrative in detail, the author sometimes relates critically to the literary model.
The events told by Odysseus and Circe in a heroic or debunking form reveal their polivalence.
In the extension of the Homeric narrative, the last part of the novel encompasses the events that occurred after the return to Itaca of Odysseus, unable to find fulfillment on his native lands because of his thirst for the unknown and adventures.
The hero’s image gradually darkens, the author accentuating his violence or his generalized suspicion.
Reconstructing the events from Circe’s perspective allows Madeline Miller to delineate from the Odyssey which she has followed scrupulously up to a certain point.
Related Results
Decolonising the Feminine: A Critique of the Christianised Arc of Circe in Madeline Miller’s Circe
Decolonising the Feminine: A Critique of the Christianised Arc of Circe in Madeline Miller’s Circe
Madeline Miller’s Circe (2018) presents itself as a feminist retelling of the Odyssey, reimagining Circe as an empowered protagonist. However, beneath this retelling lies a deeper ...
Circe, the female hero. First-person narrative and power in Madeline Miller’s Circe
Circe, the female hero. First-person narrative and power in Madeline Miller’s Circe
Abstract
This article analyzes Madeline Miller’s Circe in relation to the contemporary trend of women’s mythological retellings of marginalized female characters. Be...
FEMININE WRITING: EXAMPLES FROM INGA GAILE AND INGRĪDA TĀRAUDA
FEMININE WRITING: EXAMPLES FROM INGA GAILE AND INGRĪDA TĀRAUDA
Female writing is a new theoretical concept, that originated within the framework of the current wave of feminism criticism in the middle of the 20th century. In 70s the terms “sex...
Isolation and characterization of Bacillus subtilis groE regulatory mutants: evidence for orf39 in the dnaK operon as a repressor gene in regulating the expression of both groE and dnaK
Isolation and characterization of Bacillus subtilis groE regulatory mutants: evidence for orf39 in the dnaK operon as a repressor gene in regulating the expression of both groE and dnaK
An inverted repeat sequence known as CIRCE (controlling inverted repeat of chaperone expression) in the Bacillus subtilis groE operon has been suggested to function as an operator....
Circe’s Instructions as a Sibylline Oracle
Circe’s Instructions as a Sibylline Oracle
This chapter argues that the instructional oracle was a short hexametrical genre known to the Homeric poet and that he used it to frame the detailed instructions that Circe and Tir...
Neurosyphilis presenting as autoimmune limbic encephalitis: A case report and literature review
Neurosyphilis presenting as autoimmune limbic encephalitis: A case report and literature review
Rationale:
Neurosyphilis presenting as limbic encephalitis (LE) is an important differential diagnosis of autoimmune LE (ALE) defined by Graus in 2016. However, data on...
Into the depths of the feminine: A Jungian perspective on postfeminist working life
Into the depths of the feminine: A Jungian perspective on postfeminist working life
How do women reject the feminine in postfeminist working life, and to what effects? Organisational scholars have long argued that the feminine is discouraged or reconfigured in neo...
John Lahr on Arthur Miller: the Structure and Effects of a Life in the Theatre (Lahr, John. Arthur Miller. American Witness. New Haven, CT; London: Yale University Press, 2022.)
John Lahr on Arthur Miller: the Structure and Effects of a Life in the Theatre (Lahr, John. Arthur Miller. American Witness. New Haven, CT; London: Yale University Press, 2022.)
Theatre critic John Lahr writes Arthur Miller's biography as a meticulous study reminiscent of a fascinating novel. Relying upon extensive archival materials, correspondence, his o...


