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The Odyssey A little Background

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Page 1: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The OdysseyA little Background

Page 2: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Brief Background The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet,

Homer. Written in the oral tradition- passed on by word of

mouth. Before he wrote The Odyssey, Homer also wrote

The Iliad. In both cases, he is writing about events that happened in the PAST.

Page 3: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

We are about to begin Homer’s Epic

The Odyssey

The Odyssey is the story of the great hero Odysseus’ journey home after the Trojan

War.

But before we can begin this epic…we need to back up a little bit, and get our facts straight.

Page 4: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Trojan War You have probably heard of it before but since

our story will pick up where the Trojan War left off…it is important for us to understand a little bit about this war (and naturally it’s exciting to impress people with all of your awesome Trojan War knowledge! ).

Wasn’t Brad Pitt in a

movie about this????

Page 5: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

What’s a Trojan? A person from Troy One who shows the

qualities of Trojan soldiers: endurance, toughness, determination

Page 6: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Who? Greeks

Achilles Greatest Greek

Warrior King Agamemnon Nestor Odysseus Patroclus Menelaus

Helen’s Husband

Trojans Hector

Greatest Trojan Warrior

King Priam Father of Hector

Aeneas Paris

Helen’s Abductor

Page 7: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The previous Slide told us about the “Humans” involved in the war…but if you know anything about Greek

Mythology, the Gods were Big Too: ZEUS- King of gods and men, who mediates the

disputes of the gods on Mt. Olympus. HERA- Wife of Zeus. Goddess of marriage. POSEIDON- God of the sea. HERMES- Messenger of the Gods. Also god of

travelers and boundaries. ATHENA- daughter of Zeus. Goddess of wisdom,

battle, and womanly arts.

Page 8: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The previous Slide told us about the “Humans” involved in the war…but if you know anything about Greek Mythology, the

Gods were Big Too:

ARTEMIS- Apollo’s twin. Goddess of the hunt. (associated with the Roman Goddess, Diana– remember the allusion to her in Romeo & Juliet?)

ARES- God of war (savage warfare) APOLLO- Artemis’s twin. God of the sun, light,

truth, archery, medicine & healing, the arts. APHRODITE- Goddess of love, lust, beauty.

Page 9: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

With whom did the Gods side?

Greeks Hera Poseidon Hermes Athena

Trojans Artemis Ares Apollo Aphrodite

Zeus tries to remain neutral

Page 10: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

How did it start? Eris, goddess of discord, was not invited to a wedding

banquet on Mt. Olympus (where the Gods live). So, to get back at them, she tossed a golden apple inscribed

with “For the Fairest” into the banquet hall. Athena, Hera, and Aphrodite asked Zeus “Zeus, which of us

is the Fairest (a.k.a. who’s prettier?)?” They wanted him to decide who should receive the apple!

Zeus would not choose. (He’s no fool!) Zeus says Paris is an excellent judge of beauty, and refers the

goddesses to him (when in doubt, always pass stuff off to other people!).

Page 11: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Judgment of Paris Paris was King Priam’s son He was rather weak and cowardly. When the goddesses appeared to him, they each

offered him a bribe: Athena would make him a great warrior. Hera would make him ruler of Europe and Asia. Aphrodite would give him the most beautiful

woman in the world. Hmmm, which do you think he chose?

WRONG ONE!

Page 12: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Who did he choose? Paris gave the apple to

Aphrodite (are we really surprised?)

She then took Paris to Helen, the most beautiful woman in the world.

Hera and Athena, however, vowed revenge. Dun,dun,dun…

Page 13: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Helen

She was the wife of Menelaus (he was the King of Sparta).

Menelaus was the brother of the Greek King, Agamemnon.

See the problem?

Page 14: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Paris takes Helen

Page 15: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Greeks Respond

Menelaus asks all of Greece to help.

Greek armies set off across the sea to lay siege to Troy and leave it in ashes.

And so begins the Trojan War.

Helen is often referred to as “The Face that Launched a Thousand Ships.”

Page 16: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Odysseus & Achilles Join the Effort Late

Odysseus didn’t want to fight for Helen. He thought her a faithless woman. He did not want to leave his home (Ithaca).

Achilles was kept back by his mother. Thetis (his Mommy) was a sea nymph who knew he was

fated to die in Troy. She had dipped him in the river Styx to try and give him

immortality (she held him by the heel). Both of these great Greek warriors were later called

(forced) into battle where they played important roles in many battles.

Page 17: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Battle Rages Due to the influence of various gods and

goddesses, the war went back and forth for many years.

Page 18: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Agamemnon Leader of all Greek forces

during Trojan War Offended Achilles by

taking his “prize” (a girl named Briseis) after one battle

Page 19: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Achilles Pouts Because Agamemnon offended

him, Achilles refused to fight. Then things went badly for the

Greeks, and they begged Achilles to return.

Achilles allowed his friend, Patroclus, to fight in his place, wearing his armor.

Patroclus is killed by Hector (who thought Patroclus was Achilles).

Page 20: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Achilles Returns Enraged over the death

of Patroclus, Achilles returns to battle.

His mother gets him some new armor (aww, what a nice mommy).

Achilles kills Hector

I AM

ACHILLES!!!

Page 21: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Achilles Relents King Priam sneaks into the Greek camp and begs

Achilles to give him Hector’s body so that his son may have proper funeral rites.

Achilles allows Priam to take the body. After Hector’s death, Achilles does not have long to live.

Page 22: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Death of Achilles Achilles was unconquerable by mortal men,

but Apollo stepped in. Apollo guided Paris’s arrow into the only

weak spot Achilles had: his heel (your “Achilles’ heel” is your weakness- get it?)

Achilles dies from the wound. The remaining Greeks decide his divine

armor should go to the bravest remaining warrior.

Page 23: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

Odysseus Wins Odysseus makes a

speech explaining why he deserves it, and he is awarded the armor of Achilles.

He then devises the final plan to end the Trojan War.

Page 24: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Trojan Horse The Greeks pretend to

retreat, leaving behind a large wooden horse.

The Trojans, in celebration, drag the horse inside their city as a war prize.

Page 25: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Trojan Horse

Odysseus and many other Greek Odysseus and many other Greek warriors are hiding inside the horse.warriors are hiding inside the horse.

Page 26: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Fall of Troy They wait until the Trojans

are asleep, and then they come out and slaughter them!

The Trojan War is over! The Greeks won. The Trojans lost. Odysseus is the greatest hero

remaining alive…but now he has to get home…

Page 27: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Odyssey Begins… The story of The

Odyssey is about Odysseus’ journey home (to Ithaca) after the Trojan War.

It’s quite a journey!

Page 28: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on
Page 29: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on
Page 30: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

The Structure The Odyssey is generally divided in 24 books (we

are not going to read all of them!) It begins in medias res- in the middle of things. Written in dactylic hexameter (Lines made from six

–HEXA- feet)DACTYL- stressed, unstressed, unstressed syllables

- The first 4 feet are either dactyls or spondees (stressed, stressed) - The 5th foot is almost always a dactyl - The 6th foot is usually a spondee

Page 31: The Odyssey A little Background. Brief Background  The Odyssey was written by the great epic poet, Homer.  Written in the oral tradition- passed on

What is an Epic? The epic is a long, narrative poem about a serious subject. It contains details

of heroic deeds and events significant to a cultureEpics have 6 main characteristics: The hero is of national importance The setting is vast. The action consists of deeds of great valor Supernatural forces—gods, angels, demons—interest themselves in

the action. Elevated style (lofty/formal language) The poet retains a measure

of objectivity. Follows the quest format