Transcript The Odyssey

The Odyssey
You will:
 learn about Homer
 why the Greeks are hospitable
 See where Odysseus travels
 Review theme, irony,
characterization, and symbolism
Who Was Homer, Anyway?
 Blind poet from the island of Chios
 describes events as a seeing person
 lived around 900-700 B.C.E
 Wrote the Illiad and the Odyssey
 he told stories to entertain and to make
his living; audiences had to listen
carefully (This is “oral tradition” so there
was a lot of repetition and improvisation
used.)
 One scholar suggests Homer was a
woman because home and hearth
played such an important role in his
stories.
 Some scholar think there were two
Homers. Some think he was just a
legend.
 Homeric poems could be the work of
one or more talented bards – singers
who make up their verses as they sing
• Some say he is just a legend, others say that a whole
series of rhapsodes (traveling poets) composed
various parts of the epics
 Rhapsodes were the historians, entertainers, and
mythmakers of their time responsible for
spreading news about recent events or the doings
of heroes, gods, and goddesses
 Singers might have summarized part of the tales,
depending on how long they stayed in one
community.
• They memorized and recited these epics in the
banquet halls of kings and noble families
• The epics were not originally written--the
Greek alphabet didn’t appear until 725 BC
• Homer’s works were the first read by Greek
children.
 Homer is concerned with the relationship
between human and gods.
 In Homer’s stories, a god can be an alter
ego—a reflection of a hero’s best or worst
qualities
 For Homer, the gods control all things,
including Odysseus’s fate.
 The Greeks used Homer’s epics, the Iliad
and the Odyssey, to teach Greek virtues.
 Homer used POETRY because rhyme/meter
is easier to memorize and more stable as
passed-on
 Homer did not invent the story, but
transcribed it into its longest-lasting form
 All versions we read are translated from
ancient Greek language – Translations can
vary greatly
Who is Odysseus?
 Odysseus is known for his mental abilities,
so he receives aid from Athena, the goddess
of wisdom.
 Odysseus can also be cruel and violent.
Odysseus’s nemesis is Poseidon, the god of
the sea, who is known for arrogance and
brutishness.
 Greek myths play an important role in the
Odyssey
Why were the Greeks so hospitable?
 Hospitable means receiving or treating guests
or strangers warmly and generously
 Hospitality in Homer’s time was well shown
through long travels such as Odysseus' in The
Odyssey as well as the guest-friend
relationship, known as xenia.
 Traveling in Homer’s time was much more
extensive and lengthier than in modern times.
The less advanced methods of transportation
used in Homeric times, such as by boat or by
foot, were much slower than modern forms of
transportation
 There were not hotels or inns where
travelers could pay and stay the night. Even
if there were, travelers probably could not
afford to pay for every night they were gone.
 Some payment for this hospitality in the
form of a gift exchange.
 Xenia is the Greek relationship between two
people from different regions. This allowed
for the members of the relationship to safely
travel into the other member’s territory and
receive a place to stay and something to eat
Where
did
Odysseus
travel?
Review of vocab:
 Characterization – how a writer develops
characters: physical appearance, his nature is
revealed by own thoughts, feelings, & actions;
other character’s thoughts, feelings, actions toward
that person; a narrator’s direct comments
 Theme – the message the author wants to get
across, a thought about life or human nature that
the writer wants to share
 Irony – reality is the opposite from what it
seems;when someone says one thing and means
another
 Symbolism – when an author use a person, place,
activity or object to represent something else