Odyssey Essay

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    Many people while reading Homer’s epic The Odyssey don't think of Penelope as a hero at all. Well according to the Oxford dictionaries a hero is a person who is admired or ideas for courage, outstanding achievements, or noble qualities. Penelope without doubt possesses noble qualities such as intelligence, patience, and loyalty Penelope herself has a heroic stature. Penelope is the wife of Odysseus the protagonist this is a fact because in the Odyssey translated by Allen Mandelbaum, it states

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    An Analysis of Some Book Endings from the Odyssey The majority of the work done for this essay has been investigative rather than interpretive: I have analyzed each Book in the Odyssey, their respective endings and beginnings, in order to discover, if any were to be discovered, patterns and interrelations. Surprisingly, the endings are more related than I had anticipated. As a natural result of their relatedness, I have created three groups which mostly, though not totally, account for various

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    The major themes of The Odyssey are loyalty, hospitality, revenge and Disguise. Penelope stays loyal to Odysseus for 20 years, waiting for him to return home and Eurycleia is loyal to Odysseus and tells him who had been disloyal to him while he was away. When Homer recorded The Odyssey, members of the household and staff were loyal to the paterfamilias. Loyalty was expected in ancient Greek times out of respect. Women and servants were submissive to the paterfamilias and their loyalty demonstrated

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    Melody Park Mrs. Tweed English 1HP Period 4 15 September 2016 The Odyssey Draft #2 Loyalty is a trait that can help guide you through many difficult situations. It is a quality that the Ancient Greeks were shown to value through their epics. Odysseus, hero of Homer’s epic poem, The Odyssey, is a character that reveals several values of Ancient Greek culture through his qualities of honesty, devotion, and support. One of the most prominent values portrayed throughout the story is loyalty. One way

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    Women in Ancient Greece Ever since The Odyssey by Homer was written in the 8th century BC Greek women were limited to their rights compared to a man who had more freedom. The Odyssey is an epic poem about mainly a Greek hero named Odysseus and all the poems take you through his journeys and problems that occur to find his way back home to Ithaca. As the novel progresses, an indiscriminate and rambunctious group of suitors who have invaded Odysseus's royal residence and looted his property keep on

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    hospitable to their guests, and conversely, the guests had their own responsibilities as well. If either the host or the guest was to break any rule set by Xenia, there would be severe penalties dealt by Zeus and also by society (Wikipedia). In The Odyssey, Xenia is a theme which is shown repeatedly throughout the book: Nestor and Menelaos take in Telemakhos warmly as a guest and Eumaios plays an excellent host to Odysseus, while Odysseus is disguised as a wandering

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    The Greeks, as portrayed by Homer, are a very vengeful people. Throughout The Odyssey, a theme of vengeance is dominant. These displays of retribution come from different entities for fairly different reasons. So why is revenge such a factor in The Odyssey? Fear and the overwhelming feeling of payback are two answers. Homer gives numerous examples of how certain characters demonstrate their power in a fury of rage. He writes of the payback Zeus gives to those who break the rules, of Poseidon’s

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    fight in a war that was none of his business in the first place. That’s how Penelope from The Odyssey must feel. Her husband Odysseus leaves her to be a part of the Trojan war and then goes on many of his own expeditions. Each of the three texts: The Odyssey by Homer, Penelope to Ulysses by Anne Kilegrew, and Penelope by Dorothy Parker presents Odysseus’ wife in a different manner. In Homers The Odyssey, Penelope is depicted as clever yet melancholy and defeated. Penelope is quite clever because

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    Gods, Ulysses, The Odyssey. Is it Hospitality, Loyalty, Perseverance, Vengeance, Appearance vs. Reality, or Spiritual Growth? In my opinion, I think the main theme of The Odyssey is Spiritual Growth, in the case it means how does the relationships between the Gods and Ulysses change. Two ways that prove that Spiritual Growth is the main theme of the Odyssey is when Ulysses ended up on the Island of the Keeper of the Wind and he gave him a bag of wind to use on the 9th day of sailing in order to get

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    guests, within the Grecian city-states. Therefore, if literature is indeed the reflection of its society’s ideologies, then one may anticipate such emphasis on hospitality in the time-tested works of Ancient Greek literature, for instance, Homer’ The Odyssey translated by Robert Fitzgerald. The significance of xenia is meticulously constructed in the tale

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