Although military concepts in Homeric poetry have been studied since
Alexandrian times, there has not been until now an extended study of the
concept of alke, 'defensive strength, ' as it unfolds intertextually
within the Iliad and the Odyssey and archaic Greek poetry generally.
Derek Collins uses evidence from Homeric poetry to reveal that alke,
unlike other concepts of strength in archaic Greek, plays a central role
in defining a warrior at the peak of his prowess, which can be related
in turn to its application to kings and to its use by Zeus and Athena as
divine emblems of warfare. Just as importantly, Collins shows how alke
functions poetically as a plot device for the Odyssey as the poem
retrospectively views the Iliad. Finally, by integrating evidence from
linguistics, anthropology, and comparative literature, Collins argues
that the meaning of alke cannot be divorced from the oral-traditional
media from which it emerges, and that its conceptual structure depends
as much on archaic Greek as it does on the poetic demands of the Iliad
and the Odyssey