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Ava
Chitwood, "The Anonymous Philosopher of Charles Frazier’s
Cold Mountain: A Heraclitean Hero in a Homeric World,"
IJCT 11 (2004-2005), pp. 232-243.
1997’s surprise best-seller, Cold Mountain, is
the first novel of North Carolina native and travel writer, Charles
Frazier. Two ancient Greek authors shape and drive the novel, set
in the post-war Southern Appalachians of 1865. Homer’s Odyssey
frames the novel: the hero Inman undergoes epic adventures after
the war, has his own Penelope waiting, and travels back to a land
as remote as any island, Cold Mountain, North Carolina. But fragments
of an anonymous philosopher who can be identified as Heraclitus
alienate Inman from the Homeric world around him and determine his
fate. Ada, his Penelope, also casts off her shroud of tradition:
impatient with the ‘glorious war,’ no longer content
to wait, Ada plunges into the new business of living. And just as
the archaic, post-Homeric Greek world produced new ways of living
and thought, as exemplified by Heraclitus, so too does the post-bellum
world of Cold Mountain, as exemplified by Inman and Ada;
their struggle, and the novel’s tension, speak to and about
all those caught between two worlds, epic and philosophic, whether
driven by love or strife.
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