Recent Anglophone works (American, Canadian, and British) that take the Homeric epics or the Trojan cycle as their point of departure have common themes that reflect the preoccupations and discontents of our contemporary civilization. In a wide variety of media—from plays to graphic novels, from lyric poetry to short stories—they emphasize what Mikhail Bakhtin called the “centrifugal” aspects of the epics: those aspects that, rather than converging on a single unified meaning, pull the audience in a number of less normative directions. This effect is achieved in several ways: by focusing on alternative outcomes (traditional or newly invented) to that of the canonical texts; by privileging the focalization of minor characters; and by emphas...