Mark Pucci
Published: 2013-07-21
Total Pages: 116
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Calliope is a literary novel. In its simplest form, it is the story of a man longing to become the young, idealistic person he once was when the world seemed completely open to promise. It is the desire to re-experience life with all the naiveté and hope of romantic youth. In its allegorical form, the story explores such themes as purpose, morality, social convention, materialism and happiness.When the protagonist meets an orange-haired girl, his life is forever altered. Her name is Calliope, and what occurs throughout the rest of the novel is a wild, episodic fugue. The flight becomes a frenetic interlacing through wilderness and civilization, this being an allusion to Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality. The wilderness comes to represent a path back to the primal self, while civilization is more dubious representing both the potential for corruption, as well as the great heights of artistic and rational endeavors. Yet while on the journey, the protagonist is forced to look at life anew in part due to the somewhat unscrupulous efforts of Calliope. Morality is examined through the eyes of Calliope, who is by all intensive purposes Greek, which means pre-Christian. Her moral code is not affected by the guilt of Christianity. Her nakedness throughout the novel in part symbolizes a complete lack of shame. As for her beliefs, an understanding of Friedrich Nietzsche's perspectivism best represents her values. This allows the protagonist an opportunity to erase everything that he has learned. All custom, all forms of etiquette, religious belief, habit and convention must be forgotten in order to re-experience the world with the sense of wonderment he so eagerly longs for. With no ties to the world, he embarks upon an epic voyage of silliness and profound examination. Lured along by this electric, orange-haired muse, he becomes convinced that she is either bent upon his supreme salvation or utter damnation. What is so amazing about the entire journey is where they both end up—a location which seems to be the last place the protagonist was in complete control of his destiny. Therefore, a true chance to begin again is perhaps realized.