Wednesday, January 22, 2020
Revenge and Violence in Cassandra :: Cassandra Essays
Revenge and Violence in Cassandra     Ã  Ã      Ã  Ã  Ã   In "Mycenae  Lookout," Seamus Heaney tells the story of Agamemnon, Clytemnestra and Cassandra  after the Trojan war. "Cassandra" is the second part of "Mycenae Lookout" and  chronicles Cassandra, Apollo's ill-fated prophetess, who is captured by  Agamemnon at the war's end and brought back to Mycenae as a slave. The fates of  Cassandra and the House of Atreus collide with Agamemnon's return to Mycenae,  where his wife Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus plot his murder.Ã    Aegisthus and Clytemnestra both seek revenge: Clytemnestra for her daughter's  sacrifice and Aegisthus for the overthrow of his father and the sins of  Agamemnon's father Atreus, of which Aegisthus was the only survivor. While  Heaney probably drew from many classical sources for his poem, the section  entitled "Cassandra" seems especially drawn from Aeschylus' play Agamemnon.  Heaney compresses the events of Agamemnon into a mere 64 lines but still  retains, partially through uses of the binaries w   hich are contained in the play,  the classic and timeless story of revenge and a violent vicious circle.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   "Cassandra" begins with  Cassandra's description. She is described as a prisoner of war might look,  "soiled" (4), "devastated" (6-7) and "camp-fucked" (12), rather than marble  smooth and serene, as one might expect a classical Greek figure to appear.  Heaney focuses on her appearance and describes her clothing, "her little  breasts" and the state of her head in lines four through ten. It is not until he  gets to line 11, though, that he comments on what may have happened to her as a  prisoner of the Trojan War. "Camp-fucked," with its feel of sexual violence,  implies that, along with physical abuse and enslavement, Cassandra has endured  rape as well (12). In lines eight through thirteen, Heaney chooses words, such  as "punk," "char-eyed" and "gawk" to illustrate succinctly Cassandra's position  in the House of Atreus: she is an alien, traumatized by the destruction she has  witnessed and stunned to awkwardness by her descent from princess of Troy to  slave of Myc   enae.      Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The speaker says, "People /  could feel / a missed / trueness" in Cassandra (14-17). This paragraph comes to  a point with the word "focus," which is used as a verb.  					    
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