Experiencing Hektor by Lynn Kozak;
Author:Lynn Kozak; [Kozak, Lynn]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781474245456
Publisher: Bloomsbury UK
Published: 2016-10-22T00:00:00+00:00
Aias/Hektor: 16.358â418
Now the narrative cuts back to Aias, whom the narrative last showed giving way, letting the ships catch fire as he recognized Zeusâs role in Hektorâs success against him (16.114â23; γνῶ at 6.119). But when the audience aligns with Aias again, he is âalwaysâ trying to hit Hektor (αἰὲν, 16.355), slightly effacing Aiasâs giving way, to suggest that their fighting has been continuous. The fight between Aias and Hektor has been going on for around fifty minutes of performance time (since 15.414), even longer if we consider a break between Books 15 and 16. The narrative switches audience alignment back to Hektor, who now is on the defensive, using his shield to avoid Aiasâs many casts, because he knows how to fight (16.359â61); this recaps and confirms Hektorâs own claim of knowing how to fight, back in his single combat with Aias, over seven hours ago (7.234â43).22 And now, Hektor recognizes that the tide has turned against him (γίνÏÏκε, 16.362), but he defends his men anyway (16.363 cf. Aias at 16.119â21). This audience alignment with Hektor, the access to his knowing that he is losing and keeping on anyway, creates further audience allegiance with the Trojan hero.
But then the narrative immediately calls whatever allegiance has been built into question, because after a simile describing the rising of the Trojansâ terrified shouts like a thunderhead, the Trojans run, and Hektor runs, too, and âleaves his men behindâ (λεá¿Ïε δὲ λαὸν/ ΤÏÏÏκÏν, 16.368f.).23 The narrative makes little effort to explain this sudden shift, which has profound implications for audience allegiance to Hektorâs character as he abandons his men to die, quite graphically, in the ditch (16.367â79). In terms of narrative, Hektorâs removal here from the battlefield allows for Patroklosâs ascendancy and for other Trojans to come to the foreground against him, including Sarpedon. But for me, it still leaves a sinking feeling, a gnawing that Hektor should not have run away, especially not with Aias holding out so well in contrast. Hektorâs flight disrupts the anticipated confrontation between Hektor and Patroklos that so many previous beats suggested, giving just a brief, teasing, glimpse of that fight, as Patroklos tries to hit Hektor, and Hektor escapes (16.380â3).
The narrative then switches audience alignment to Patroklos as he breaks through the front lines (ÏÏÏÏÎ±Ï á¼ÏÎκεÏÏε ÏάλαγγαÏ, 16.394) and then kills no fewer than twelve men in just under two minutes of performance time (16.399â418). Through these scenes, the narrative presents a seemingly unstoppable Patroklos â but is it enough to make an audience forgive Hektor for running away? In a review of the Game of Thrones episode âHardhomeâ,24 Verge critic Emily Yoshida, writing about a White Walker (zombie) massacre that one of the showâs protagonists Jon Snow escapes from, says: âMy heart says Jon should get a bonus score just for not dying, because it seemed all but inevitable for a second there â¦â25 While Jon Snow escapes, a new heroine, Karsi, just introduced in the same episode, falls at the hands of the
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