In Unit 4 Area of Study 2, you must evaluate the techniques used to express ideas in both paired classical works — and compare how those techniques are similar, different, or interact with each other. Technique analysis is not simply identifying devices; it is explaining how specific techniques express specific ideas and why a comparison of techniques matters.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA requires you to evaluate the key ideas in two works, the techniques used to express those ideas, and the connections between the works and their contexts. Technique analysis must serve comparative argument.
| Technique | Homer | Virgil | Comparative Insight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Invocation of the Muse | “Sing, goddess, the anger of Achilles” — invokes anger/wrath as the subject | “I sing of arms and the man” — the arms come before the man, emphasising collective/martial over individual | Virgil’s inversion signals a shift from individual heroism to duty-driven heroism |
| Epic simile | Achilles attacking Hector = hawk on dove; Trojan women weeping = bees swarming — drawn from everyday natural life | Dido’s grief = a wounded deer; Aeneas’s fleet scattered = ants at work — often drawn from Rome’s natural and civic world | Homer’s similes bring the heroic world into contact with nature; Virgil’s connect the heroic to Roman civic and natural identity |
| Epithet | “Swift-footed Achilles,” “grey-eyed Athena” — reflect heroic/divine qualities | “Pious Aeneas” (pius Aeneas) — reflects Roman duty, not just physical or martial quality | The choice of epithet encodes the hero’s defining virtue: Greek timē vs Roman pietas |
| Divine intervention | Gods intervene unpredictably, take sides, have personal stakes | Gods intervene within a framework of fatum — Juno opposes, but Jupiter’s plan cannot ultimately be stopped | Homer’s divine machinery reflects contingency; Virgil’s reflects teleological destiny |
| Aristeia | Extended sequences of heroic battle excellence (Diomedes Book 5, Achilles Books 20–22) | Aeneas has battle moments but is not defined by aristeia — his heroism is more sacrificial than spectacular | Homer’s hero is the warrior; Virgil’s hero endures the warrior role while longing for peace |
| Technique | How It Expresses Ideas |
|---|---|
| Chorus | Comments on action; represents the community’s voice — uncertain, shifting; in Antigone, the chorus embodies the audience’s inability to choose between Creon and Antigone |
| Stichomythia | Rapid line-by-line dialogue (e.g. Antigone and Creon in confrontation) — creates tension, defines positions sharply, dramatises the unbridgeable conflict |
| Hamartia and peripeteia | Creon’s hamartia (arrogance, refusal to yield) drives the peripeteia (reversal from power to ruin) — the tragic structure itself makes the argument about the consequences of hubris |
| Off-stage deaths | Deaths reported by messenger (angelos) — Antigone’s suicide, Haemon’s death, Eurydice’s suicide — creates cumulative grief; the audience’s imagination amplifies horror |
| Prophecy (Tiresias) | Divine knowledge confirms Creon’s error and signals divine justice — prophecy is the mechanism by which the play’s moral claim is authorised |
| Direct speech / monologue | Antigone’s final lament — “I go to my rocky tomb” — makes her interiority visible and generates the emotional identification on which catharsis depends |
KEY TAKEAWAY: In tragedy, the structure is the argument. The sequence of hamartia → peripeteia → catharsis encodes the play’s claim about justice, hubris, and divine order. Technique and ideology are inseparable.
| Technique | How It Expresses Ideas |
|---|---|
| Constructed speeches | Thucydides admits his speeches are “what seemed most fitting” rather than verbatim records — speeches dramatise opposing positions (e.g. Melian Dialogue) and allow the historian to enact arguments |
| Paired speeches | Cleon vs Diodotus on Mytilene (Book 3); Nicias vs Alcibiades on Sicily (Book 6) — presenting opposing arguments without explicit authorial verdict, placing the burden of judgment on the reader |
| Clinical analysis | Deliberately non-poetic prose; cause-and-effect structure; rational agent model — technique enacts the claim that war is a rational (if terrifying) system, not divine punishment |
| Irony | Thucydides’ irony is structural — the reader sees patterns (e.g. Athenian arrogance) the characters cannot. Pericles’ funeral oration (Book 2) is followed almost immediately by the plague, ironising his confidence |
| The pathology of civil strife (stasis) | Description in Book 3 uses quasi-medical language — “the meaning of words began to change” — to diagnose civil war as a disease of the polis, not just military conflict |
The key question: Do the two works use the same technique differently, or different techniques to achieve similar effects?
Example — Fate and divine will:
- Homer conveys fate through Zeus weighing souls on golden scales (Iliad 22) — a visual, dramatic image that makes fate feel like a weighable, physical reality.
- Virgil conveys fate through Jupiter’s prophecy to Venus (Aeneid 1) — an elaborate verbal forecast of Roman history that stretches to Augustus. Fate here is not weighable but predetermined and comprehensive.
- Comparative insight: Both use divine machinery to express fate, but Homer’s fate is local and dramatic (this death, now) while Virgil’s is cosmic and teleological (all of Roman history, culminating in the present).
Example — Characterising the hero:
- Homer characterises Achilles through direct speech — his debates with Agamemnon (Book 1), Odysseus (Book 9), and Priam (Book 24) each reveal a different facet of his character.
- Sophocles characterises Antigone through action and consequence — we see her through what she does and what she refuses to say or do in the face of authority.
- Comparative insight: Epic characterisation is cumulative and speech-based; tragic characterisation is concentrated and action-based. The genre difference explains the technique difference.
| Work | Key Technique | Idea Expressed |
|---|---|---|
| Homer Iliad | Epic simile | War’s grandeur and its connection to ordinary life and death |
| Virgil Aeneid | Jupiter’s prophecy / Parade of Heroes | Rome’s destiny as divinely ordained and historically inevitable |
| Sophocles Antigone | Hamartia/peripeteia structure | Hubris leads to destruction; divine justice operates through human tragedy |
| Thucydides | Constructed speeches / paired arguments | Political reality is contested; the reader must judge without authorial prescription |
COMMON MISTAKE: Don’t identify a technique and then explain it in isolation. Always connect technique to idea, and always bring it back to the comparison: “While Homer uses [technique] to express [idea A], Virgil uses [different/same technique] to express [idea B/same idea differently].”