Odysseus essay topics

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  • Temptations Of Odysseus
    1,568 words
    Temptations of Odysseus Odysseus: a hero in every way. He is a real man, skilled in the sports, handy with a sword and spear, and a master of war strategy. Most of the challenges and adventures in his return voyage from Troy show us this even if we had no idea of his great heroic stature and accomplishments in the Trojan war. I found in my reading of the Odyssey that most of the trials the gods place upon him are readily faced with heroic means. These challenges are not necessarily welcomed by O...
  • Odysseus And Telemachus
    652 words
    The Odyssey, Essay#1 Women are important to the plot and overall theme of the Odyssey. In fact, without many of the women there would not be a complex plot to this epic poem. In the narrative and in Greek society women played a variety of roles, as mothers, herons, and many other strong roles yet, they were treated as less significant, and were made to be loyal and submissive to men. The women were required to wait on and sulk for love, as Penelope did for 20 years. In Greek society, the women h...
  • Circe And Calypso
    453 words
    Although both Circe and Calypso from Homer's The Odyssey fulfill the archetypal theme of the witch who hinders the protagonist's return, they have several differences between them. One of the first differences is simply the way that each witch detains Odysseus. When Odysseus meets Circe, he subdues her with a plan given to him by Hermes, Zeus personal messenger: As soon as Circe gives you a tap with her long rod, draw your sword she will be terrified, and will invite you to come in with her. Do ...
  • Suffering Mother In The Odyssey
    698 words
    Women Portrayed in Homer's The Odyssey Women were very important to the Greeks, and they showed this value in many ways. In The Odyssey Homer shows us the different ways women were looked upon through female characters, such as Penelope, Naussica, and Anticlia. With Penelope, a faithful and loving wife to Odysseus, Homer reveals to us how the Greeks believed wives should act. She was loyal to Odysseus the entire time he was away on his journey, and even when it appeared as if he had passed on sh...
  • Patriarchy In The Odyssey Women
    637 words
    Patriarchy in The Odyssey Women were always looked upon as inferior to males since the very beginning of time. This method, called patriarchy, was much displayed in Homer's Odyssey. The Odyssey favored the male specie, and viewed the men as more dominant than the females. For instance, Odysseus wife, Penelope, had been probed by the suitors while Odysseus was gone. Penelope's son, Telemachus had left her and his homeland of Ithaca to go to try and find his long-lost father, Odysseus. There was a...
  • Odysseus Triumph Over The Suitors
    1,749 words
    In Homer's epic, The Odyssey, various aspects of the ancient Greeks are revealed through the actions, characters, plot, and wording. Homer uses his skill as a playwright, poet, and philosopher to inform the audience of the history, prides, and achievements of the ancient Greeks, and, also, to tell of the many values and the multi-faceted culture of the ancient Greek caste. The Greeks had numerous values and customs, of which the primary principles are the mental characteristics of an individual,...
  • Society Of The Iliad And Odyssey
    1,919 words
    The views and beliefs of societies are often portrayed in the literature, art, and cinema of a certain era. The epic poems, The Iliad and Odyssey, give scholars and historians an idea how the Ancient Greek lived their everyday lives. By reading the two 'novels,' the reader is able to experience the three thousand years old society of Homer. The various similarities between our society and the societies depicted in the Iliad and the Odyssey are surprising profuse. To name a few: the superfluous v...
  • Men For Odysseus And Telemakhos
    614 words
    Man or Boy Telemakhos Can't Decide Many boys who grow up without a father lack the direction and insight gained only through having a masculine role model. Such a boy is introduced in Homers' epic tale The Odyssey as Telemakhos, Odysseus's on. In the beginning of the story, Homer portrays Telemakhos as a timid and passive person who has not the strength to run out the suitors who have taken over his house. However, in Book XXI lines 358-378 the reader may note a dramatic change in Telemakhos' at...
  • Great Leadership Of Odysseus
    777 words
    To be known as a hero takes a lot. But what is a true hero To some, a hero might just be a person who has a lot of courage and bravery, to others a hero might be a person that is a strong warrior and leader who wins battles; still to others a hero might be a person who uses his brain just as much as his muscle to win battles. In Homer's epic poem, The Odyssey, Odysseus proves that he is a true hero in all of these ways. Courage and bravery are two things that Odysseus has a lot of Maybe even a l...
  • Odysseus's Un And Shadow Traits The Traits
    798 words
    Odysseus's un and Shadow Traits The traits or characteristics of a person play a major role in his / her life. The sun side is the ostensible meaning, the side that is most obvious and bare of all symbols, inner meanings, and shrouded connotations. The shadow side is the hidden element of a person, or the side that they would rather keep from the public view, knowing that it is dark or evil. No matter who they are, everybody has these two sides in them. In Homer's epic poem, The Odyssey, Odysseu...
  • Menelaos And Odysseus
    1,835 words
    Comparison Between Tale of Proteus and Odysseus's Adventure to the Underworld "Now draw back from the pit, and hold your sharp sword away from me / so that I can drink of the blood and speak the truth to you" (Odyssey 11.95). This quote, taken from Teiresias as he is confronted by Odysseus' request to learn of his way home and the evils occurring in his palace, can very well be a climatic moment in the tale of the Underworld (Don Nardo 121). After Odysseus learns of the happenings in Ith ika and...
  • Odysseus
    509 words
    The Odyssey is the story of Odysseus and how he faced misfortune in his attempts to return home after the Trojan war. From these misfortunes he learned to be a better man and became able to regain his place in his homeland of Ithaca. During his journeys Odysseus often makes the mistake of staying to boast to his enemies but learns that boasting gives his opposition a chance to seek retribution against him. After leaving Troy Odysseus attacks the land of the Cic ones. Instead of leaving after his...
  • Next Few Lines Odysseus
    1,137 words
    In the selected passage of book five, there are many different themes present. Many of these themes can only be appreciated once you look deeper into the meaning of the text and take the whole book into account. These passage from the book five describes Odysseus actions once he has washed up on shore after eighteen days at sea from the island of Kalypso. He exhausted an old tired and broken man and it takes all the energy he has left to find shelter and sleep. Immediately in line 474 a major th...

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