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Nausicaa (; often rendered Nausicaä or Nausikaa; ) is a character in Homer's Odyssey (Odýsseia). She is the daughter of King Alcinous (Alkínoös) and Queen Arete of Phaeacia. Her name, in Greek, means "burner of ships".
In Book Six of the Odyssey, Odysseus is shipwrecked on the coast of Phaeacia. Nausicaa and her father's servants go to the sea-shore to wash clothes. Odysseus emerges from the forest completely naked, scaring the servants away, and begs Nausicaa for aid. Nausicaa gives Odysseus some of the laundry to wear, and takes him to the edge of the town. Realizing that Odysseus being seen with her might cause rumors, she and the servants go ahead into town. But first she advises Odysseus to go directly to Alcinous' house and make his case to Nausicaa's mother, Arete. Arete is known as wiser even than Alcinous, and Alcinous trusts her judgments. Odysseus approaches Arete, wins her approval, and is received as a guest by Alcinous.
During his stay, Odysseus recounts his adventures to Alcinous and his court. This recounting forms a substantial portion of the Odyssey. Alcinous then generously provides Odysseus with the ships that finally bring him home to Ithaca.
Nausicaa is young and very pretty; Odysseus says that she resembled a goddess, particularly Artemis. Nausicaa is known to have several brothers. According to Aristotle and Dictys of Crete, Nausicaa later married Telemachus, the son of Odysseus, and had a son named Perseptolis or Ptoliporthus.
Homer gives a literary account of love never expressed: while she is presented as a potential love interest to Odysseus – she says to her friend that she would like her husband to be like him, and her father tells Odysseus he would let him marry her – nothing really results between the pair. Nausicaa is also a mother figure for Odysseus; she ensures Odysseus' return home, and thus says "Never forget me, for I gave you life," indicating her status as a "new mother" in Odysseus' rebirth.
Nausicaa has been occasionally referenced in literature and art. The manga and anime film Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki, was indirectly inspired by the character in the Odyssey. Miyazaki read a description of Nausicaa in a Japanese translation of Bernard Evslin's anthology of Greek mythology, which portrayed her as a lover of nature. Miyazaki added other embellishments to fill in the gaps from Homer.
In "The Humor of Homer" in his Selected Essays Samuel Butler concludes that Nausicaa was the real author of the Odyssey, since the laundry scene is more realistic and plausible than many other scenes in the epic. It is unlikely that Butler was completely serious about this.
Chapter 13 in James Joyce's Ulysses is entitled "Nausicaa" and echoes the story to a degree: the character Gerty McDowell (Nausicaa's analogue) tempts Bloom.
William Faulkner named the cruise ship Nausikaa in his 1927 novel "Mosquitoes."
Robert Graves' 1955 novel Homer's Daughter presents Nausicaa as the author of the Odyssey, which draws on experiences and influences of her own life.
An asteroid discovered in 1879, 192 Nausikaa, is named after her.
The Australian composer Peggy Glanville-Hicks wrote an opera entitled Nausicaa (libretto by Robert Graves) first performed 1961 at the Athens Festival.
In 2010, the band Glass Wave recorded a song entitled "Nausicaa," sung in the voice of the Phaeacian maiden.
Nausicaans are a race of tall, strong, aggressive humanoids in the Star Trek universe.
Category:Greek mythology Category:Women in Greek mythology Category:Characters in the Odyssey Category:Corcyraean mythology
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