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Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A)
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Page 1: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A)

Page 2: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Homer (8th century B.C.E.)

Page 3: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Mycenean Greece and the Orient

Page 4: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Trojans/ Troy

• Myceneans• syllabary language • Bronze Age

Page 5: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Map for the Odyssey

Page 6: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

• length

• content: historic, mythic

• motifs

• divine intervention

• heroic flaw

• orality and performance, writing

• language

• magical or legendary objects

Elements of Epic Writing

Page 7: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

• in media res (“Of the cunning hero…After he plundered Troy’s sacred heights” I:2–3)

• invocation (“Speak, Memory” I:1)

• epic/ Homeric simile

• epithet (“Dawn’s pale rose fingers”)

• ekphrasis

Literary Devices

Page 8: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Background

• “andra” (man)• females: Calypso,

Sirens, Scylla, Penelope, Circe, Nausicaa

• mythical lands: Lotus Eaters, Cyclopes, Phaeacia

• real places: Sparta, Ithaca

Page 9: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Eris

Page 10: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

• Odysseus (angry, hated, cursed)

• Polyphemus (much-named)

• Penelope (duck face)

• Telemachus (distant fighter)

• Circe (bird)

• Nausicaa (burner of ships)

Naming Conventions

Page 11: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

• glory (kleos)

• reciprocity (negative reciprocity) (charis)

• valor

• guest–host hospitality (xenia)

• loyalty, piety, filial respect (eusebeia)

• duty (aidos)

Ancient Greek Values

Page 12: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Cyclopes

Page 13: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Test of the Bow

Page 14: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

• “Start carrying out the bodies, and have the women help you…when you have set the house in order, take the women outside…slash them with swords until they have forgotten their secret lovemaking with the suitors” (XXII: 462–69).

• “These women, their heads hanging in a row, the cable looped around each of their necks. It was a most piteous death” (XXII: 494–96).

Execution of the Maids

Page 15: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

The Conjugal Bed

Page 16: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

How do ancient Greek values of heroism and appropriate behavior compare to those promoted in other ancient works and in your current culture?

Discussion Questions

Page 17: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

Are women, according to Homer’s epic, to be trusted, cherished, feared, or treated as possessions? How does this compare to the treatment of women in other ancient epics, as in Gilgamesh and the Ramayana?

Discussion Questions

Page 18: Homer: The Odyssey (Volume A). Homer (8th century B.C.E. )

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