Homer
Ancient Greek · Ancient Greek
Author (attributed) of The Iliad and The Odyssey, the foundational texts of Western literature. The Odyssey charts a hero's long journey home.
Connection to Taylor Swift
Taylor’s link to the classical epic tradition. Uncle Jerry connects cowboy like me’s in-medias-res opening directly to the Odyssey, hears Homer’s sirens in the “sirens” of Getaway Car, and traces Cassandra’s burning Troy and weaving Fates to the Iliad and Odyssey. Uncle Jerry and Angela also read the Odyssey behind the Jungian anima interpretation of evermore.
Notable Works
- The Iliad, The Odyssey
Appears in the Archive
Context within the Archive
The Odyssey
“And the tennis court was covered up With some tent-like thing”
Angela & Uncle Jerry discuss how 'cowboy like me' begins in medias res, a technique Uncle Jerry directly connects to The Odyssey, where Odysseus washes up naked on a beach and tells his entire story in flashback. He notes the song uses the same device of dropping the listener into the middle of a story to create tension, though unlike The Odyssey it does not employ flashback.
The Odyssey
“There were sirens in the beat of your heart”
Angela & Uncle Jerry identify the word 'sirens' as carrying lexical ambiguity, literally the sound of police sirens in a getaway-car chase, but also the sirens from Homer's Odyssey, monstrous women who sing to lure men onto the rocks. Uncle Jerry connects this to the monstrous femininity theme they have discussed in previous episodes, noting that the sirens are a sound of warning that the man in the song does not heed. He frames this as an intentional double meaning.
The Odyssey
Angela & Uncle Jerry cite the Odyssey as one of the multiple classical texts in which Cassandra appears. Uncle Jerry also notes that the three Fates who weave the future on their dark looms appear in the Odyssey, connecting to Taylor's use of 'weaving nightmares' in the song.
The Iliad
“So they set my life in flames, I regret to say”
Angela & Uncle Jerry note that 'set my life in flames' echoes the burning of Troy in the Iliad and related classical texts. Uncle Jerry identifies this as one of the key events Cassandra predicted, the destruction of Troy by fire, and connects the lyric directly to the classical narrative. The Iliad is named as one of the primary texts in which Cassandra appears.
The Odyssey
“My spine split from carrying us up the hill”
Angela & Uncle Jerry identify a possible Sisyphean reference in the image of carrying something up a hill. Uncle Jerry explains the myth of Sisyphus from the Odyssey, one of two Titans punished in Hades whose task is to roll a stone up a hill, with the promise of freedom if he reaches the top, but the stone grows larger and rolls back down before he can succeed. Angela initially recalls the image of someone carrying something heavy that breaks their spine, and Uncle Jerry identifies it as Sisyphus. They agree this may be a Sisyphean reference, the futile, endless labor of maintaining the relationship.
The Odyssey
Angela & Uncle Jerry reference The Odyssey in the context of Jung's anima concept and Joseph Campbell's monomyth, Uncle Jerry notes that in the Odyssey, Odysseus's anima is clearly Athena, who serves as his spirit guide. This is used to support the interpretation that the second voice in evermore's bridge functions as an animus/spirit guide for the speaker.