the odyssey

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A Review Game The Odyssey

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The Odyssey. A Review Game. Gods, Goddesses, and Mortals, Oh My!. 100. Odysseus stays with her for seven years. 100. Calypso. 200. He raises a storm to destroy Odysseus’s raft when he sails from Calypso’s island. 200. Poseidon. 300. The goddess of wisdom; she favors Odysseus. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The  Odyssey

A Review Game

The Odyssey

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Odysseus stays with her for seven years

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Calypso

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He raises a storm to destroy Odysseus’s raft when he sails from Calypso’s island

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Poseidon

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The goddess of wisdom;

she favors Odysseus

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Athena

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The king of the gods; hesends down a thunderbolt which destroys Odysseus’

remaining ship and causes his crew to drown

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Zeus

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She turns Odysseus’s men into pigs

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Circe

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A character’s background orfamily tree is listed

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Catalog

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A character brags about

his past to gain respect

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Boasting

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The gods and goddesses get involved in human affairs

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Divine Intervention

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The present is interrupted to go back and tell about something that happened earlier

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Flashback

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The social code of taking care of guests and warriors

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Hospitality Code

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“‘My name is Noman; aye, and Noman my father and my mother called me and all my comrades.’”

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Intelligence

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“‘We are not, friends, untried in danger. This new peril that lies before us is no greater than when the Cyclops caught and held us fast in his hollow cave.

Yet we found escape . . . I think we shall live to tell the tale of this day too.’”

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Leadership

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“I put on my glorious armor and I grasped two spears in my hand and

took my station on the decked prow, for there I thought I first should see appear this Scylla.”

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Bravery

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“Here Cyclops, take this wine, and drink after your feast of human flesh, and learn how good a drink we kept hidden within our ship.’”

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Intelligence

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“So there I took my stand by it (a large piece of olive wood) and cut a fathom’s length away, and this I gave my men and bade them shape it. They made it smooth, while I stood by and brought it to a point and charred it in a glowing fire.”

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Battle Skills

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“‘I am Odysseus, great Laertes’ son.’”

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Catalog

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Odysseus goes to the underworld to talk to the blindprophet, Teiresias

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Visit to Hades

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“Zeus now thundered from on high and hurled his bolt upon the ship.”

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Divine Intervention

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“Tell me the tale, Muse, of that man of many changes, he who went wandering so far when

he had plundered Troy’s sacred citadel.”

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Call to the Muse

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While Odysseus is at the Land of thePhaeacians, he recalls his wanderings and tells Alcinous what happened to him after he left Troy

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Flashback

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Wife of Odysseus

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Penelope

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Creator of The Odyssey

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Homer

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Homer’s first epic about the Trojan War

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The Iliad

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These giant cannibals destroy 11 of Odysseus’s ships

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Laestrygonians

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He is the king in charge of the winds; he places the stormy

winds in a bag so Odysseus can sail back to Ithaca

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King Aeolus

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Odysseus is tied to the mast so he can

hear their song

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The Sirens

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This king takes Odysseus in as a stranger, and

Odysseus tells him about his travels

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Alcinous

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Odysseus is warned not to harm his

cattle

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Helios

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These characters get three of Odysseus’s men to eat a flower

that makes them forget about their

homeland

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The Lotus Eaters

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Odysseus lost 72 of his men to this powerful

army

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Cicones

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The character takes a trip to the Underworld

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Visit to Hades

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At the beginning of the epic when the poet asks for divine inspiration in

telling his story

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Call to the Muse

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The action of the epic begins in the

middle

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In Medias Res

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A phrase that describes or

renames a person

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Epithet

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An overused, descriptive phrase

repeated in the epic; helps the poet

memorize his work

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Stock Phrase

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The story begins with Telemachus going off in search of his father who never returned from the

Trojan War

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In Medias Res

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“But when the dawn came, early-born and

rosy-fingered.”

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Stock Phrase

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“‘If, O Cyclops, a mortal man shall ever ask you how it befell your eye

was blinded so hideously, then answer thus: it was Odysseus blinded

you, taker of Troy, Laertes’ son who dwells in Ithaca.’”

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•Boasting•Epithet•Catalog

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“‘Now we come hither before your knees to pray you give welcome to your guests and grant us such gifts

as guests should have.’”

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Hospitality Code

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1000“‘Odysseus, taker of

Troy”

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1000Epithet

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This monster has 12 tentacle-like legs, six heads on serpent-like

necks, and triple, razor-sharp fangs; kills six of Odysseus’ men

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Scylla

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A long, narrative poem about a superhuman hero

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Epic

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The great Greek warrior killed when a poisoned arrow hit him in his weak spot

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Achilles

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A traveling singer of tales

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Rhapsode

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This monster swallows sea water, causing a

dangerous whirlpool

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Charybdis