From: Andrew Lorimer Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2019 00:16:50 +0000 (+1100) Subject: [english] quote integration X-Git-Tag: yr12~209 X-Git-Url: https://git.lorimer.id.au/notes.git/diff_plain/0c94e3f5899c04323423c03dd6adc11947332ee4 [english] quote integration --- diff --git a/english/troy-paragraphs.md b/english/troy-paragraphs.md index 6f77d21..a5a0d62 100644 --- a/english/troy-paragraphs.md +++ b/english/troy-paragraphs.md @@ -47,3 +47,6 @@ Andromache has a similar reaction to the grief she experiences, but also longs f Cassandra responds to grief in an unusual way: more passively than Hecuba, but with revenge and whole-hearted irrationality. After she is raped by Ajax, her father Priam murdered, and her hometown of Troy invaded, readers expect her to be mournful, but her "half-crazed state" causes quite the opposite. Cassandra simply wants revenge, as she states that Odysseus will "be shipwrecked more than once" and that Agamemnon "will find [her] more destructive as a wife than ever Helen was!". This shows how Cassandra, regardless of her inherent irrationality, responds to these events with further rash and violent decisions. One factor which may contribute to Cassandra's response is her ability to prophesy - she knows that her enslavement is inevitable, so she accepts it instead of preventing it, and plans subsequent revenge on Agamemnon and Odysseus. This is a great contrast to the reflective state that Hecuba and others adopt, but Euripides presents it as another impact of grief. _Women of Troy_ shows three distinct impacts of grief: increased persistence, reliance on others, and revenge. Euripides contrasts how these are displayed by different characters, and the prior personality traits that contribute to one's response to trauma. However, it is clear that trauma may be horrendous and perpetual regardless of the situation, and the benefits are never worth the pain. + +- Cassandra's revengeful spirit is shown when she commits to be "more destructive a wife than ever Helen was", referring to her desire to get revenge on Agamemnon. +