Stereotypes In 'The Gods Are Dangerous'

Words: 1004
Pages: 5

What do humans think when they picture Greek gods? Are they mostly good? Bad? Is there an answer to this question? The most accurate answer is that humans speculate that gods are normal and help due to the fact that we only ponder on the good gods, which are the majority, which excludes the morbid side of theocracy. What happens if theocracy of tyrants became the leading role in some kind of tale? What will happen with the audience perception and the global meaning of the specific work of literature? The 1500-year-old Sumerian tablet tale, Gilgamesh, tampered and translated by David Ferry, which displays an idea of threatening theocracy in a story about the expedition of a valiant hero. The text-conveyed theme, The Gods are Dangerous, develops the theme quickly while implementing an idea of a slow build-up of important scenes to create suspense; and focusing on the idea that the gods shy away from understanding humans which demonstrates an act of force without reason to maintain the theme throughout …show more content…
What do you humans think of when they picture Greek gods? Bad, hopefully. This essay should have changed your viewpoint on all Greek gods by analyzing all the aspects of theme deeply and clearly while showing where the theme is prevalent the most. The suspense is used after the character(s) is impacted by a powerful event exerted by main gods who ignore the fact that they are purposely harming innocent beings. The greater danger created by gods not just comes from their sense of impeccability but rather the lack of understanding that both species have for each other to impact all the characters of the tale greatly, which is why in the modern world we learn to acclimate to new