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(J.P.) CHRISTENSEN The Many-Minded Man: The Odyssey, Psychology, and the Therapy of Epic (Myth and Poetics II). Ithaca NY and London: Cornell University Press, 2020. Pp. xii + 342. $39.95. 9781501752346.

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(J.P.) CHRISTENSEN The Many-Minded Man: The Odyssey, Psychology, and the Therapy of Epic (Myth and Poetics II). Ithaca NY and London: Cornell University Press, 2020. Pp. xii + 342. $39.95. 9781501752346.

Part of: Literature

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 April 2023

Fabian Horn*
Affiliation:
LMU Munich
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Abstract

Type
Reviews of Books: Literature
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies

In the introduction, Joel Christensen sets the stage for his monograph by making the ‘basic and simplest contention … that through long-term engagement with the [Homeric] poems during performance in different contexts, ancient audiences were influenced emotionally and intellectually by them; and that this process shaped the epics too, making them more sensitive to and reflective of human emotional and mental states’ (15). With the intent of ‘present[ing] a reading of the Odyssey in its entirety from the perspective of modern psychology and relat[ing] it to the general therapeutic function of the poem’ (21), the first chapter (‘Homeric Psychology’, 21–45) provides the theoretical and methodological underpinnings for this endeavour, drawing on approaches from cognitive science, clinical psychology and psychotherapy as well as literary studies.

Chapter 2 (‘Treating Telemachus, Education, and Learned Helplessness’, 47–69) discusses Telemachus’ coming of age in terms of claiming agency, and chapters 3 (‘Escaping Ogygia, an Isolated Man’, 71–85), 4 (‘Odysseus’s Apologoi and Narrative Therapy’, 87–114) and 5 (‘Odysseus’s Lies: Correspondence, Coherence, and the Narrative Agent’, 115–47) focus on Odysseus reclaiming his identity and sense of self. On the theoretical basis of the psychological practice of narrative therapy, Christensen argues that Odysseus’ tales at the court of Alcinous as well as his various, consciously mendacious narratives contribute to a recovery from his initial learned helplessness on Ogygia to the reassertion of his heroic agency. In these steps, Christensen asserts, the Odyssey depicts the importance and salutary effects of taking control of one’s own narrative.

These observations find their complement in an investigation of marginalized groups in the epic, such as women and slaves, through the lens of disability studies in chapters 6 (‘Marginalized Agencies and Narrative Selves’, 149–73) and 7 (‘Penelope’s Subordinated Agency’, 175–202). In contrast with the male protagonists, subordinate characters have a limited sense of self, which is defined by their relation to others, and constrained agency, insofar as their activities and initiative are only socially acceptable when they are exercised in support of or in service to their superiors.

Finally, chapters 8 (‘The Politics of Ithaca: From Collective Trauma to Amnesty’s End’, 203–39) and 9 (‘The Therapy of Oblivion, Unforgettable Pain, and the Odyssey’s End’, 241–73) focus both on how the political and private spheres on Ithaca overlap and collide and on what effects the Odyssey’s narrative might have had on its audience. Christensen acknowledges that the epic tales likely developed in a time when individual households (οἶκοι) were the dominant units of social organization but envisions a situation on Ithaca more corresponding to the age of rising city states (πόλεις). He notes that the people of Ithaca have been traumatized by the lack of leadership and political order caused by Odysseus’ absence, as well as by the loss of several young men, first because of the Trojan War and then because of the slaughter of the suitors. As a result of Odysseus’ vengeance following his return, the community is fractured and divided about how to respond, and the situation ultimately requires Zeus’ intervention of ἔκλησις (‘amnesty’, Od. 24.485). Christensen concludes that the epic is not only sensitive to individual but also to communal psychology and engages its audience in contemplation of the damaging discourse of vengeance.

The conclusion (‘Escaping (the) Story’s Bounds’, 275–89) offers a defence of the book’s approach of applying modern psychological theories to the epic by briefly reviewing the tradition of allegorical interpretation of the Odyssey. Christensen closes with reflections on the prophecy of Teiresias and some implications of the observation that even though the poem ends, Odysseus’ own story is not finished.

With this monograph, Christensen offers a nuanced and attentive reading of the Odyssey through the lens of contemporary psychology and cognitive science. Though some readers might disagree with his approach, interpretative choices or details of his findings (as he himself anticipates in the conclusion), the book is well-argued and thought-provoking. That being said, despite the plausibility of his individual arguments, the reciprocal effects between audience responses, therapeutic function and the formation of the poem, which are mentioned in the introduction, are otherwise not considered systematically.

One final observation that emerges from this reading of the Odyssey is how human and humanely the epic depicts its characters. Contrary to the Iliad and traditions of heroic poetry that present their protagonists as ‘larger than life’, the Odyssey shows its eponymous hero – together with Telemachus and Penelope – as psychologically vulnerable humans, subject to traumatic events and sensitive to public opinion. In this, they are neither superior nor fundamentally different from the members of the audience, which facilitates their identification with the poem’s characters and its therapeutic effects. These in turn may account for, as well as contribute to, the influence of the reception of earlier versions on later performances that Christensen postulates.