
In The War That Killed Achilles, Caroline Alexander explains the greek heroic belief that a younger generation could never surpass the greatness of the one previous, creating ancient heroes that were to be looked upon as insurmountable in their glory and prestige. However, Thetis, Achilles' immortal mother, was fated to birth a son who was greater than his father, upsetting the mythological norm of the time. Thus no God was willing to father this son, fearing the same fate of Zeus's father, and he was born to a mortal -- destined to die as all mortals do. Imagine if the Gods in the myths held the ideas of the American dream today, to live a better life than our fathers, to move forward in each generation, held true? Would this have changed the greatest mortal fighter's fate into that of a God? In the modern age, when one's family background is almost purposefully overlooked in the name of equality, it's hard to relate to the powerful influence of paternity in past generations. The question of whether this freedom from our father's is a curse or a blessing is subjective... one I look forward to investigating in "Clash Of The Titans", an upcoming film about the son of Zeus taking arms against his father. He chooses to fight for the people his was raised with instead of his own blood, touching on the existential subject of existence versus essence. Nevertheless he will have to come to term with his own bloodline, as we are all our father's sons, no matter how much we wish we weren't.