Anakin and Achilles: Scars of Nihilism

In Jason T. Eberl & Kevin S. Decker (eds.), The Ultimate Star Wars and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 42–52 (2015-09-18)
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Abstract

This chapter discusses the roles of Anakin Skywalker in central story of the Star Wars saga, and that of Achilles in the ancient Greek epic poem The Iliad. When Anakin discovers that his mother has died violently at the hands of Tusken Raiders, his anger is transmuted into blind, hate‐filled rage and he goes on a killing spree in revenge. Like Anakin, Achilles' anger is turned into blind, hate‐filled rage when the person he loves most, Patroclus, is killed by Hector, the prince of the Trojans. Like Anakin, Achilles barely managed to reemerge from the greatest danger and the greatest temptation he ever faced: nihilism. Anakin and Achilles found that going down the dark path of nihilism can cost them dearly. Like Achilles, Anakin barely makes it back from his journey into nihilism.

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Don Adams
Central Connecticut State University

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