Events

Sophus Helle: “Implode/Explode: Forms of Violence in Gilgamesh and the Iliad”

Friday, February 7, 2025
11:00 am – 1:00 pm

The Italian Academy, 5th-floor seminar room

Sophus Helle
Princeton University

Implode/Explode: Forms of Violence in Gilgamesh and the Iliad

The many comparative studies that have considered the relation between Gilgamesh and the Iliad, whether looking for the influence between them or not, have explored such similarities as the two heroes’ love (Gilgamesh’s for Enkidu and Achilles’s and Patroclus), shared phrases and concepts in the poems, and echoes between their narrative arcs. This talk will instead focus on one striking dissimilarity between the two epics: the emotional reactions of the two main characters to the death of their beloveds. These reactions, Gilgamesh’s implosion and Achilles’s explosion, spark structurally opposite narrative trajectories, as Gilgamesh rejects death in every conceivable way while Achilles just as comprehensively embraces it. Combining the comparative methodology developed by Johannes Haubold—which neither disallows nor necessitates a direct influence between the texts being studied—with the idea of “forms of violence” developed by Leo Bersani and Ulysse Detoit, this talk will juxtapose the formal and conceptual structures of the violence that is unleashed by the deaths of Enkidu and Patroclus.

Center for the Ancient Mediterranean
Columbia University
Department of Art History and Archaeology
  1200 Amsterdam Avenue
653-A Ext. Schermerhorn Hall, MC 5517
New York, NY 10027
 212-854-0200

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