A place where I'll post up some thoughts and ideas - especially on literature in education, children's literature in general, poetry, reading, writing, teaching and thoughts on current affairs.
Sunday, 27 December 2020
Destructive forces: in King Lear and the Odyssey
Two forces:
the one where you destroy things;
the other when things destroy you.
King Lear destroys the love
Cordelia had for him
but he is destroyed by bigger forces
coming from Goneril, Regan and Edmund.
Unlike Odysseus’s hubris
where his destruction of Polyphemus
brings on the destructive powers of Poseidon,
Lear’s destruction of love
doesn’t bring on
the destructive powers of
Goneril, Regan and Edmund.
You can say
that through facing their destructive powers
Lear comes to see that
he was wrong to have destroyed
the love he had.
The cause and effect of the Odyssey
is reversed.
And then
interwoven into that
Lear comes to see that ‘pomp’
- wealth and power -
needs to ‘take physic’
it needs to be taken down,
be made more merciful, kinder
and more egalitarian:
‘Shake the superflux’,
he says.