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Part 1: Students will perform the following assignment: "Theodicy" originates as a late 18th-century word from French Théodicée, the title of a work by the philosopher Leibniz, who took it from...

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Part 1:Students will perform the following assignment:

"Theodicy" originates as a late 18th-century word from French Théodicée, the title of a work by the philosopher Leibniz, who took it from Greek:theos,"god" + dikē, "justice." But it typically comes to us as a journey or an adventure in literature that is ordered to a writer's consciousness of "god's justice," or "divine justice."Literary artists through the ages have used the dramatic unfolding of what's called "theodicy" in literature (a version of "odyssey" in literature) in order to give expression to (1)what is known as "the problem of evil" inthe world; (2) to support the supremacy of one particular god over another; (3) to explain wisdom; or (4) to explain a conversion experience of a given hero or character. In any case, all the literary forms oftheodicyhave in common a species of "closeness to the gods" that results in a narrative in which ways of god (s) and the ways ofmankind are seen as either harmonious or disharmonious. When harmony finallypredominates in narratives oftheodicy(as in Homer'sIliad) usually it's because (A) the aptitude todiscerndivinetruth and (B) the readiness to beobedientto it predominates in representatives of mankind. But when disharmony finally predominates in narratives oftheodicyusually it's because either discernment or a readiness towards divine obedience is either faulty or resistant in representatives of mankind in such narratives.

Using any dimension of the above characterization of "theodicy," or any dimension you know of or have found in researches,find (1) one representation of "theodicy" in Part 1, "Agamemnon," of Aeschylus' Orestia Trilogy; (2) quote the representation; and (3) explain how you believe it to be a representation of "theodicy." (appx. 250 words)


Part 2:Students will perform the following assignment:

Are there similarities or differences (or both similarities and differences) in the nature of therelationships between (1) mankind and god (s) in theOrsetiaTrilogy,and (2) mankind and god (s) in the Iliadby Homer? Indeed, you can pick one character's relationship with the god (s) from each text: for example Orestes' in the Orestiaand Achilles inIliad.(appx. 250 words)

You also use this link :https://www.ancient-literature.com/greece_aeschylus_oresteia.html

Answered Same Day Sep 26, 2022

Solution

Ishfaq Ahmad answered on Sep 27 2022
61 Votes
Zeus as Ultimate Fulfille
A key concept of theodicy is that everything that happens in the world is God's plan due to God's omnipotence. Upon killing Agamemnon, Clytemnestra exclaims, "And when he had fallen, I added a third stroke, in thanksgiving to Zeus of the underworld, the saviour of the dead" (1385-7). Similarly, from line 1485 through line 1489, the chorus depicts Zeus as the ultimate ruler of men. So they all exclaim "Oh, no!" And it is all because to the divine will of Zeus, the origin of all things and the cause of all consequences, for nothing happens to mortals unless it is orchestrated by the god himself. How much of it is not preordained by God? The chorus's invocation of Zeus shows that the divine had a significant role in Agamemnon's downfall. The play concludes with a discussion on Zeus's vast power and engagement in human affairs, as well as the nature of the god's justice. As Zeus sits on his throne, the chorus repeats his...
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