Homer's Iliad

Akademik_Komarov

Akademik_Komarov

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Perhaps I'm writing something unique in world history.

Homer's Iliad is a story about masculinity and femininity.

Even at first glance, it appears to be a courtship ritual between a man and a woman.

In this story, Hector personifies the feminine desire to resist a man's advances. Hector easily defeats the rational Achaean leaders (narcissistic, reasonable, and brave), while pure masculine rage, represented by Achilles, locks himself in his mother's cellar.

Male rage erupts from the cellar when Hector kills Potroclus with a blow to the groin (perhaps it was for good reason that Homer wrote "a blow to the groin," as if insulting masculinity), thereby destroying all the kindness and tenderness that existed in Achaean men.

And Hector doesn't resist this rage; He bows before her and dies, thereby preparing the gates of Troy (the vagina) for the entry of the Greek horse (the penis).

And all the other characters and events in the epic can be interpreted in the same way.
 
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Trojans repeatedly refuse a peaceful solution to the issue, wanting to be raped, like a woman who flirts
 
The feminine will always be raped by the masculine. And the feminine knows this. By possessing feminine values, a person condemns themselves to rape.
I think these are the feminine values that Homer reflected as gods:
a thirst for bloodshed for the sake of bloodshed itself (Ares)
a desire to preserve form but not content (Apollo)
Fleeting pleasures (Aphrodite)
By adopting these positions, you appear as something passively feminine, worthy of rape, and you will inevitably receive it.
 
Philosophers had different attitudes toward the Iliad.
For example, Plato (being very feminine and vulnerable) treated the Iliad the way normie-women treat pornography. This is not surprising, since the story is practically pornographic.
Arestotel, being masculine but not devoid of femininity, adored this story.
 
Tales from ancient Greece.
 
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Reactions: Soter and Akademik_Komarov
Perhaps I'm writing something unique in world history.

Homer's Iliad is a story about masculinity and femininity.

Even at first glance, it appears to be a courtship ritual between a man and a woman.

In this story, Hector personifies the feminine desire to resist a man's advances. Hector easily defeats the rational Achaean leaders (narcissistic, reasonable, and brave), while pure masculine rage, represented by Achilles, locks himself in his mother's cellar.

Male rage erupts from the cellar when Hector kills Potroclus with a blow to the groin (perhaps it was for good reason that Homer wrote "a blow to the groin," as if insulting masculinity), thereby destroying all the kindness and tenderness that existed in Achaean men.

And Hector doesn't resist this rage; He bows before her and dies, thereby preparing the gates of Troy (the vagina) for the entry of the Greek horse (the penis).

And all the other characters and events in the epic can be interpreted in the same way.
Interesting way to view the story
 

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