Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The answerto your question is that you are asking the wrong question.
Most people don't read "the classics" and value them do so because they want to understand the impact those works had on history and on other works. If you haven't read the bible and a good anthology of greek myth, you won't be able to understand references to those two cultural touchstones that are included in every work of literature during hundreds of years or European history. You may or may not find The Illiad interesting, but it will enhance your ability to connect to many, many other works of literature.
In more recent "classics," we look at how it influenced style (James Joyce) or politics (Marx) or various social movements (Zora Neale Hurston) and read it because we want to understand how the original work interacted with society and influenced readers and subsequent authors.
So, if you want to read things that you, personally, connect to, then knock yourself out. But that has nothing to do with classic literature.
NP here. This covers it very well. I don't know if anyone would read Dante for the suspense or romance (although the Inferno is pretty funny in places). You read it for the insight it gives you into Dante's world, to admire his attempt to represent his own views on his religion, and to understand the references to "Abandon Hope" and the 9 circles.