Transcript Slid
Odyssey Power Point Notes
Homeric Epics
• Iliad and the Odyssey
• Composed in Greece around 750-725 B.C.
• First told orally or sang
• Put into writing generations later
• Blind poet – Homer – gets credit
~ scholars have long debated if Homer
really existed
~ agree that work might have been the work of
one or two talented bards
(singers who made up their verses as they sang)
Important Epic Elements of the Plot
• Trojan War
• Heroism of Odysseus
• Interference of the
Gods
Trojan War
• Legendary war around 1200 B.C.
• Earliest accounts of ancient Greece
are recorded in Iliad and Odyssey
• According to Legend
~ Trojan prince Paris kidnaps Helen
from Sparta
~ King Menelaus recruits Greek kings
and soldiers
~ recover his wife and honor
~ Lasts 10 years
Iliad
• Takes place during last year of war
•
Focuses on Achilles and his quarrel with
Agamemnon
~ over a girl/spoil of war
•
Odysseus devises scheme to end war
~ Giant wooden horse (Trojan Horse)
~ Greeks leave it outside gate and “flee”
~ Trojans think they are gone – horse is offering
~ Bring it inside = Greeks jump out during night
~ Defeat unsuspecting Trojans
Odyssey
• Deals with Odysseus’
adventures on his way home to
Ithaca
• Depart from Troy with 12 ships
and 720 men
• Details accounts with monsters,
enchanting women, and
homecoming
~ uses his craft and guile to
concur opponents and difficult
situations
Intervention of the Gods
• Greeks believed the gods interacted with
humans
• Hera, Athena, Poseidon supported Greeks
• Aphrodite, Ares, Apollo, Artemis supported
the Trojans
• Zeus stayed neutral (but liked the Trojans
more)
• Odysseus has Athena on his side
~ angers Poseidon = difficulties
• Odyssey supports Greek moral = don’t
upset gods
Terms
• Epic -- long narrative poem
-- about adventures of a hero
• Epic Hero -- larger-than-life figure
-- usually male
-- possesses superhuman
strength, craftiness, and confidence
-- helped/harmed by interfering gods
-- embodies ideals and values of a culture
-- since he is mortal = character flaws
• Epic Plot -- Involves a long journey,
full of complications:
-- strange monsters
-- large-scale events
-- divine intervention
-- treacherous weather
• Epic Setting – includes fantastic or
exotic lands and
more than one nation
• Epic Themes – courage, loyalty,
beauty, a homecoming,
life and death,
the fate of a nation
• Archetypes -- characters found in works
across time and cultures
-- sea monster, trickster, hero, wicked,
-- destroyer, loyal servants, temptress
• Allusion -- reference to a famous person,
place, or event
-- Example: When Odysseus’ son describes
the palace of Menelaus he says, “This is the
way the court of Zeus must be.”
Every Greek would have understood this
allusion to the ruler of the gods.
• Epithet -- brief descriptive phrase used to characterize a
particular person or thing
-- Odysseus is known as “son of Laertes”
“raider or cities” “master mariner”
• Simile --
comparison using like or as
• Epic Simile --simile that goes on for several lines
Example: “At sight of the man panting and dying
there, she slips down to enfold him, crying out;then
feels the spears, prodding her back and shoulders,
and goes bound into slavery and grief. Piteous
weeping wears away her cheeks: but no more piteous
than Odysseus’ tears”
-- A weeping Odysseus is being compared to a wife
who first weeps for her husband, who has died on the
battlefield then is taken into slavery