The essay offers a rereading of Homeric epic through the theory of perceptual misalignment. Its central claim is that Homer’s world is not organized around an autonomous, inward, modern Self, but around a form of experience distributed among body, gods, fate, community, public speech, and nature. The essay does not argue that interiority is absent from the poems: Achilles, Hector, Penelope, and Odysseus are deeply individualized figures. Their interiority, however, is not represented as a private and separate space, but as something that appears through gesture, body, ritual, glory, shame, public recognition, and divine intervention. Through episodes such as Athena restraining Achilles in the Iliad, the essay shows how emotions, decisions, and conflicts emerge from a field of forces wider than the individual. Its conclusion is that Homeric epic presents a world already filled with meaning, in which the human being is not the absolute center of perception, but a node within a network of presences, relations, and powers.
Sandra Voss (Tue,) studied this question.