The story of Actaeon and the inevitability of myth

Date

2017

Authors

Hawes, Greta

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Centre of Byzantine, Modern Greek and Cypriot Studies

Abstract

Comparison of ancient accounts of the myth of Actaeon shows that, while the nature of his offense differs markedly between sources, the form of his death is stable throughout antiquity. This chapter uses observations from Nick Lowe and Ada Neschke-Hentschke about the paradigmatic functioning of myths to consider how the inevitability of Actaeon’s end could be harnessed to lend specific narrative colouring to retellings. It uses Ovid’s account of Actaeon in the Metamorphoses to examine the broader ancient tradition, arguing that the identification of Actaeon by name functioned in a meta-poetic manner to hasten his death, and that the inevitability of this death brought with it implicit consideration of the workings of justice in the mythic story-world.

Description

Keywords

Actaeon, Ovid, paradigm, divine justice, exemplum

Citation

Source

Type

Book chapter

Book Title

La mitologia griega en la tradicion literaria: de la Antiguedad a la Grecia contemporanea (Greek mythology in the literary tradition: from Antiquity to contemporary Greece)

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until

2037-12-31