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21 - Homo fictor deorum est: Envisioning the Divine in Late Antique Divinatory Spells

from PART III - DIACHRONIC ASPECTS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2013

Sarah Iles Johnston
Affiliation:
Ohio State University
Ruth N. Bremmer
Affiliation:
University of Groningen
Andrew Erskine
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh
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Summary

At Odyssey 16.161, the poet tells us ‘the gods do not show themselves clearly to everyone’, and there is no reason to doubt him. In this passage it is only Odysseus – and, interestingly, a group of dogs – who realize that Athena is among them. Telemachos, although standing nearby, is unaware of her presence. In other cases, no one at all recognizes a god in their midst: the royal family of Eleusis lives for weeks without knowing that they have Demeter as their nursemaid. Later Greek narratives, too, indicate that the gods were hard to recognize. Semele is so uncertain about whom she has been sleeping with – Zeus or a mortal man pretending to be Zeus – that she risks her life to find out, and loses the bet – or wins it, depending on how you look at things. After all, it turns out that Semele was right and her so-called maidservant, Beroë, was wrong. If only Semele had stopped worrying about who her paramour was and started worrying instead about who Beroë really was – namely, Hera in disguise – she would have been better off.

Outside of narrative, certainty that one was interacting with the gods was hindered not so much by divine disguises as by what we have to call simple paucity of proof: one presumed that a god was present during cult worship because one had performed a hymn invoking him, provided meat on his altar and done other things to make the situation inviting, but we rarely hear of any tangible signs – visible, audible or otherwise – that confirm presence.

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The Gods of Ancient Greece
Identities and Transformations
, pp. 406 - 421
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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