Article published In: Exploring (im)politeness in ancient languages
Edited by Kim Ridealgh
[Journal of Historical Pragmatics 20:2] 2019
► pp. 263–285
Politeness, gender and the social balance of the Homeric household
Helen between Paris and Hector in Iliad 6.321–356
Published online: 10 December 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.00032.mar
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.00032.mar
Abstract
This paper focusses on the role of women within the Homeric household (οἶκος, “oikos”) as related to politeness.
The social balance of the household has its fulcrum in the relation between the householder and his wife, and the latter has a
crucial role in preserving the face of her husband and hence his authority in the oikos. In practice, to preserve his public
image within the oikos, householders delegate a core part of their authority to their wives, and in exchange of this
wife-characters such as Penelope or the goddess Hera are keen always to stage the subaltern role, which women have in the Homeric
society. The paper compares specific examples of similar politeness strategies to the behaviour of Helen in Book 6 of the
Iliad (321–356). Helen enacts a reverse politeness strategy aiming to make her husband Paris’s face collapse
in front of Hector. By combining Erving Goffman’s concepts of “face” and “social situation” and the Homeric values of τιμή
(“timē”) and αἰδώς (“aidōs”) into a framework for studying politeness in the epics, it becomes possible to shed light on the real
power balance that – underneath the veil of politeness – characterises the relationship between the householder and his wife in
the Homeric oikos.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Goffman in the wake of Elias: Politeness and the Homeric social situation
- 3.Setting the scene: The thalamos as a room and a social situation
- 4.The mistress of the House’s authority over the thalamos
- 5.The exception of Helen
- 6.Conclusion
- Notes
Abbreviations References
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