Boys and Their Toys II- The Myth of Ares
Ares, I was once
told by classics professor, represented raw, animalistic aggression while
Athena, goddess of war, represented the disciplined courage of, say, a Greek
hoplite army. Of course, it is the discipline and applied energy of ‘civilized’
warfare that has proved so utterly destructive compared to the limited exchanges
of spears and arrows more typical among hunter gatherers. It is among the Mesopotamians that we find the first clear examples of it. We can find represented in their
art the basic unit of ancient warfare; the close ranked infantry phalanx equipped
with shield and spear. We find as well the mobile ‘shock’ arm of chariot riders
in bulky looking wagons drawn by onagers, an extinct type of donkey. This is
the basic form of the civilized army even today where we have rifle armed
footmen who hold and take ground and roving armored forces which flank the enemy
or pour rapidly through gaps in the opposing side. I have often wondered what
genius it was who first convinced a bunch of farmers and tradesmen that this
was a good way to spend their time. Perhaps it was pure intimidation though it
is hard to see how one man can intimidate a 1000 other men who are all armed
and (some of them, if they can afford it) armored. Perhaps warfare was a
break from agricultural drudgery or perhaps the pay or plunder was really good.
Perhaps though, and I say this advisedly for individuals differ, at least SOME
of these ancient fellows felt drawn to warfare as something intrinsically
enticing and glamorous. Perhaps, just perhaps, some of them felt Ares stirring
in their gut or, in this case, Ninurta. We also learn from the ancient Epic of
Gilgamesh that when two men feel the urge to kill together, Gilgamesh and Enkidu in this case, a certain intimacy may
develop which is both intense and satisfying and avoids the social awkwardness
of homo-erotic desire. In other words we have the socially approved form of
male bonding we call camaraderie and one site in which camaraderie is allowed
to flower is war. This is to say, I suppose, that war is a social
construct which uses certain psychological tendencies and processes as its
building blocks though that may get us no closer to the real mystery of it.
In a previous post I
called war ‘humanity’s basest activity’. Ancient thinkers might be shocked at
such a statement. They generally (though not exclusively) thought war among our
noblest activities and not the grim necessity it became for later Christian
theorists who had to reconcile it with the principle of charity. In a passage
in his dialogue On Order Augustine
speaks about the beauty of cock fighting (a taste we have lost!) which holds
the maximum tension within the strictest order. The fight proceeds to a necessary
conclusion yet within that necessity each bird exerts himself to the utmost.
War might be understood the same way, at least for the aristocrats who engage
in it, though Homer, who tells the truth in all matters, shows in the
figure of Thersites that the Trojan campaign was less than fully enthralling
for the grunts and conscripts. In war skill, energy, daring, loyalty and will
are all tested to the maximum degree against the grim pitiless necessity that sets
limits on what any human can accomplish through force of will or muscular effort. Even beyond sport absolute effort is
called forth in war in an arena where the stakes are life and death. This is
not only engrossing for the humans who contest for fame and plunder or to
please the boss. It is engrossing for the gods who watch and sometimes even
participate.
Military historians
and their readers (like me!) have the luxury of contemplating war as divine
spectacle for they give it a form for the intellect. They trace the patterns
and interplay of human will and effort with social, psychological, technical
and physical necessity in a manner comparable to the pleasure Zeus takes in watching
humans toil and contest. Of course, as Simone Weil reminds us in her magisterial
essay on the Iliad, it is the nature of
warfare that slowly and surely what is human in it is sunk under the sheer
weight of impersonal force. In war we all
become things whether we win or lose, whether we kill or are killed. Many
of us are reduced to pure things as
in corpses or slaves. This is the power of Ares who always lurks beneath the
civilized veneer of well-ordered hoplites and splendid chariots. Homer, who I told
you above always tells us the truth, gives us an image of this in the battle of
Achilles against the river Scamander. Inspired by rage over the death of his friend
Patroclus (again with the male bonding!), Achilles pursues the broken Trojans
across the plains of Troy. As he does so he charges into the river to pursue
some Trojans who have stumbled into it in a panicked search for safety. Soon
though, he is fighting the river itself in a mad act of hubris which has the
ironic result of allowing the Trojans to reach safety and regroup to continue
the war. This is all we need to know about Ares. A man fully possessed by this
god becomes blind to any aims he may have had going into the fight. Ares wars
with all constraint, all otherness in his nihilistic fury even the otherness of
nature itself. Further, by failing to follow the Trojans to the walls of Troy Achilles has ensured his own death at the hands of Paris. In Freud’s terms he has
become an avatar of pure thanatos,
the death instinct that consumes even itself. In war, Ares is unleashed and will
express himself. Victorious soldiers cannot rest content with achieving the
rational aims of a war but must loot, rape and destroy on a mass scale. Events
like the My Lai massacre are not simple accidents reducible to poor discipline
but a manifestation of the god himself. Athena may restrain him for a time but
not forever. In another myth Ares was
confined in a jar but here the poets stumble for Ares cannot be kept in jar:
war will release him and he will reduce humanity and nature to ultimate ruin.
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