Everything you need to know to read Homer's "Odyssey" - Jill Dash

1,950,007 views ・ 2017-01-30

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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A close encounter with a man-eating giant,
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a sorceress who turns men into pigs,
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a long-lost king taking back his throne.
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On their own, any of these make great stories,
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but each is just one episode in the "Odyssey,"
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a 12,000-line poem spanning years of Ancient Greek history, myth, and legend.
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How do we make sense of such a massive text
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that comes from and tells of a world so far away?
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The fact that we can read the "Odyssey" at all is pretty incredible,
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as it was composed before the Greek alphabet appeared in the 8th century BCE.
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It was made for listeners rather than readers,
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and was performed by oral poets called rhapsodes.
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Tradition identifies its author as a blind man named Homer.
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But no one definitively knows whether he was real or legendary.
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The earliest mentions of him occur centuries after his era.
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And the poems attributed to him seem to have been changed
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and rearranged many times by multiple authors
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before finally being written down in their current form.
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In fact, the word rhapsode means stitching together,
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as these poets combined existing stories, jokes, myths, and songs
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into a single narrative.
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To recite these massive epics live,
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rhapsodes employed a steady meter,
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along with mnemonic devices,
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like repetition of memorized passages or set pieces.
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These included descriptions of scenery and lists of characters,
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and helped the rhapsode keep their place in the narrative,
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just as the chorus or bridge of a song helps us to remember the next verses.
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Because most of the tales were familiar to the audience,
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it was common to hear the sections of the poem out of order.
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At some point, the order became set in stone
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and the story was locked into place as the one we read today.
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But since the world has changed a bit in the last several thousand years,
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it helps to have some background before jumping in.
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The "Odyssey" itself is a sequel to Homer's other famous epic, the "Iliad,"
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which tells the story of the Trojan War.
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If there's one major theme uniting both poems, it's this:
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do not, under any circumstances, incur the wrath of the gods.
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The Greek Pantheon is a dangerous mix of divine power and human insecurity,
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prone to jealousy and grudges of epic proportions.
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And many of the problems faced by humans in the poems are caused by their hubris,
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or excessive pride in believing themselves superior to the gods.
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The desire to please the gods was so great
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that the Ancient Greeks traditionally welcomed all strangers
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into their homes with generosity
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for fear that the strangers might be gods in disguise.
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This ancient code of hospitality was called xenia.
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It involved hosts providing their guests with safety, food, and comfort,
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and the guests returning the favor with courtesy and gifts if they had them.
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Xenia has a significant role in the "Odyssey,"
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where Odysseus in his wanderings is the perpetual guest,
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while in his absence, his clever wife Penelope plays non-stop host.
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The "Odyssey" recounts all of Odysseus's years of travel,
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but the narrative begins in medias res in the middle of things.
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Ten years after the Trojan War, we find our hero trapped on an island,
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still far from his native Ithaca and the family he hasn't seen for 20 years.
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Because he's angered the sea god Poseidon by blinding his son, a cyclops,
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Odysseus's passage home has been fraught with mishap after mishap.
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With trouble brewing at home and gods discussing his fate,
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Odysseus begins the account of those missing years to his hosts.
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One of the most fascinating things about the "Odyssey"
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is the gap between how little we know about its time period
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and the wealth of detail the text itself contains.
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Historians, linguists, and archeologists
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have spent centuries searching for the ruins of Troy
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and identifying which islands Odysseus visited.
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Just like its hero, the 24-book epic has made its own long journey
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through centuries of myth and history
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to tell us its incredible story today.
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