Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Reading Period 12: December 1-7: The Odyssey

Long Read: 

The Odyssey of Homer, Books 11-14

Poems: 

"Calypso" by Suzanne Vega

My name is Calypso
And I have lived alone
I live on an island
And I waken to the dawn
A long time ago
I watched him struggle with the sea
I knew that he was drowning
And I brought him into me
Now today
Come morning light
He sails away
After one last night
I let him go.

My name is Calypso
My garden overflows
Thick and wild and hidden
Is the sweetness there that grows
My hair it blows long
As I sing into the wind
My name is Calypso
And I have lived alone
I live on an island
I tell of nights
Where I could taste the salt on his skin

Salt of the waves
And of tears
And though he,pulled away
I kept him here for years
I let him go

My name is Calypso
I have let him go
In the dawn he sails away
To be gone forever more
And the waves will take him in again
But he'll know their ways now
I will stand upon the shore
With a clean heart

And my song in the wind
The sand will sting my feet
And the sky will burn
It's a lonely time ahead
I do not ask him to return
I let him go
I let him go

"Circe" by Olga Brou

THE CHARM
The fire bites, the fire bites. Bites
to the little death. Bites
till she comes to nothing. Bites
on her own sweet tongue. She goes on. Biting.

THE ANTICIPATION
They tell me a woman waits, motionless
till she’s wooed. I wait
spiderlike, effortless as they weave
even my web for me, tying the cord in knots
with their courting hands. Such power
over them. And the spell
their own. Who could release them? Who
would untie the cord
with a cloven hoof?

THE BITE
What I wear in the morning pleases
me: green shirt, skirt of wine. I am wrapped
in myself as the smell of night
wraps round my sleep when I sleep
outside. By the time
I get to the corner
bar, corner store, corner construction
site, I become divine. I turn
men into swine. Leave
them behind me whistling, grunting, wild.

Odysseus and the Sirens by John Waterhouse


Creative Assignments:

Read this essay about the John Waterhouse painting, "Odysseus and the Sirens." Now that you understand the controversy over whether the Sirens should be portrayed as beautiful women or shrieking monsters, create your own illustration of the Sirens, in which you portray them in a completely different way. Maybe they are cheeseburgers, or new releases of video games, or surfboards, or TV remotes, or something else enticing. You don't have to mimic the Waterhouse painting (although that would be amusing) but you need the familiar elements -- the ship, Odysseus tied to the mast, and the Sirens in whatever form you imagine they would appear.

OR

Circe Invidiosa by John Waterhouse
Read the two poems assigned for this week. The first one, about Calypso, gives a rather traditional interpretation of the mythical figure, and includes the standard Mediterranean island setting. The second one, about Circe, is a modern reinterpretation, with an urban setting. Write a poem about one of the figures in the Odyssey: Penelope, Circe, Calypso, Telemachus, Polyphemus, or Odysseus himself. Your poem must have two stanzas -- one that places your character in the traditional "Ancient Greece" role and setting, and one that updates your character to a modern place -- a board room, or a video arcade, or a boxing ring -- something like that.

Writing Assignment:

Your writing assignment is a 500 word essay. In your essay, analyze the essay we read in class, "What's Happened to Disney Films" by John Evans, and its use of the Toulmin model. This means you'll need to find the claim, the support, the warrant, the backing, the rebuttal, and the qualifier. All of these were discussed in class, so really what you're practicing here is how to form an essay to delivery this analysis. After you've analyzed the Toulmin structure, argue against the essay using your own rhetoric.

Quiz:

1. What is the recipe for bringing the shades to life?
2. What does Elpenor want?
3. What warning does Teiresias give to Odysseus? What should he NOT do?
4. What advice does Teiresias give to Odysseus about after he gets rid of the suitors?
5. Which dead person updates Odysseus on the doings back in his hometown?
6. How does Achilles feel about being dead?
7. How does Circe tell Odysseus he should deal with the Sirens?
8. What two monsters must Odysseus pass between to get home?
9. How does Circe tell Odysseus to get through them with the least damage?
10. How does it happen that Odysseus' men eat Helios' cattle after being strictly forbidden to do so?



Friday, November 24, 2017

Reading Period 11: November 24-30: The Odyssey


Long Read: 

The Odyssey, books 5-10

Creative Assignments:

Choose a setting to build either in Lego or Minecraft. You might portray Kalypso and her island Ogygia, or the palace of Queen Arete and King Alkinoos, the island of the Lotus-Eaters, the cave of Polyphemus (or the harbor where Odysseus made his retreat), or the island Aieia where Circe lives (Minecraft pigs, y'all!). You can use any resource packs or mods you like, but no collaborating unless each person in the collaboration has a discrete, separate part of the project which can be screenshotted individually. Post photos or screenshots to show what you made.

OR

Take any 20 line section of the Odyssey and create a 10 line poem from it which changes the meaning of the original. You can use any words or phrases you find in the original section, rearranged in whatever way you like, but ONLY words you find in the original section. Include both the original 20 lines and your new 10. 

Writing Assignments:

Book 8 introduces the blind Demodokos, a bard who some believe to represent Homer himself. But who is Homer? Do some online research and write a 300 word essay to present the reasons people have for believing two of the following theories: The Odyssey was written by a woman, who put herself in the story as Nausicaa. The Odyssey was written by Homer, who put himself in the story as Demodokos. The Iliad and the Odyssey were written by two different people. The person who "wrote" these epics was just transcribing what he was hearing from the many poets who actually "wrote" them.  Take your reader to a new place in the conclusion by asking and answering the question: Does it really matter who wrote the epics?

OR

As we have learned from reading the Iliad, Homer's heroes are glorious and noble, but they are also flawed. Achilles, for example, suffered from his own pride, and in the Odyssey we find Odysseus demonstrating the same traits. Write a 300 word essay giving one or more examples from the text that show Odysseus being prideful, and how these actions negatively affected him and his compatriots.

AP Lang:

Read in A World of Ideas, read the excerpt from Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave and also this article which contains excerpts from Hillary Clinton's book What Happened.

Quiz:

1. How does Kalypso prepare Odysseus for his journey away from her?
2. Does Alkinoos promise Odysseus his daughter's hand or safe passage home before or after he finds out Odysseus' name?
3. Why does Odysseus cry during the songs?
4. What does Odysseus tell the Kyklops his name is, when asked, and how is that a clever trick?
5. Why is the Kyklops able to aim at Odysseus' ships even though he's blinded?
6. Why does Odysseus yell his real name at the Kyklops?
7. After visiting Aiolos, Odysseus gets within sight of his own land, but ends up back at Aiolia. Why?
8. They Laestrygonians are glad the Greeks have come to visit. Why? What do they want?
9. What did Kirke the witch do to Odysseus' men?
10. According to Kirke, where does Odysseus have to visit, if he ever wants to get home?
BONUS: What two magical foods appear in these books?

Friday, November 10, 2017

Reading Period 10: November 10-16: The Odyssey

Good luck, Odysseus!
Long Read: 

The Odyssey by Homer, books 1-4 (The Telemacheia)

Poem:

"Odysseus to Telemachus"
Joseph Brodsky

 My dear Telemachus,
                   The Trojan War
is over now; I don’t recall who won it.
The Greeks, no doubt, for only they would leave
so many dead so far from their own homeland.
But still, my homeward way has proved too long.
While we were wasting time there, old Poseidon,
it almost seems, stretched and extended space.

I don’t know where I am or what this place
can be. It would appear some filthy island,
with bushes, buildings, and great grunting pigs.
A garden choked with weeds; some queen or other.
Grass and huge stones . . . Telemachus, my son!
To a wanderer the faces of all islands
resemble one another. And the mind
trips, numbering waves; eyes, sore from sea horizons,
run; and the flesh of water stuffs the ears.
I can’t remember how the war came out;
even how old you are--I can’t remember.

Grow up, then, my Telemachus, grow strong.
Only the gods know if we’ll see each other
again. You’ve long since ceased to be that babe
before whom I reined in the plowing bullocks.
Had it not been for Palamedes’ trick
we two would still be living in one household.
But maybe he was right; away from me
you are quite safe from all Oedipal passions,
and your dreams, my Telemachus, are blameless.

Creative Assignments:

Read "Odysseus to Telemachus" by Joseph Brodsky. In it, Odysseus addresses Telemachus from the island of Calypso, where he is losing track of time and his identity. Write a poem from one character mentioned in the Odyssey to another. You don't have to choose a central figure. It might be from Clytemnestra to Helen, for example. As with Brodsky's poem, make sure your poem clarifies the rhetorical moment. Who is speaking, who is being addressed, what the constraints of time and place might be, and what is the exigence or reason for writing in this moment.

OR

Mentor: "I'm not short, I'm a goddess." 

In book 2, Athena appears to Telemachus in the disguise of Mentor, Odysseus' old friend and Telemachus' mentor. Yes, mentor means "mentor" because of Mentor! This image is a famous illustration of the very popular French book Les aventures de Télémaque, written in 1699 by François Fénelon, archbishop of Cambrai. At the time, it was a political criticism of Louis XIV, and earned Fénelon some nice tasty exile. However it was a best-seller and even Thomas Jefferson loved it and read it multiple times. In this exciting tale, Telemachus and Mentor have wondrous adventures, until Mentor is actually revealed to be the goddess Minerva. Poor Mentor -- did he ever get a chance to just be himself? For your assignment, reproduce this illustration as accurately as you can.

OR

FRENCH STUDENT OPTION: Attempt a translation of the following bit from Les aventures de Télémaque:

Calypso ne pouvait se consoler du départ d’Ulysse. Dans sa douleur, elle se trouvait malheureuse d’être immortelle. Sa grotte ne résonnait plus de son chant ; les nymphes qui la servaient n’osaient lui parler. Elle se promenait souvent seule sur les gazons fleuris dont un printemps éternel bordait son île : mais ces beaux lieux, loin de modérer sa douleur, ne faisaient que lui rappeler le triste souvenir d’Ulysse, qu’elle y avait vu tant de fois auprès d’elle. Souvent elle demeurait immobile sur le rivage de la mer, qu’elle arrosait de ses larmes, et elle était sans cesse tournée vers le côté où le vaisseau d’Ulysse, fendant les ondes, avait disparu à ses yeux.
Tout à coup, elle aperçut les débris d’un navire qui venait de faire naufrage, des bancs de rameurs mis en pièces, des rames écartées çà et là sur le sable, un gouvernail, un mât, des cordages flottant sur la côte ; puis elle découvre de loin deux hommes, dont l’un paraissait âgé ; l’autre, quoique jeune, ressemblait à Ulysse. Il avait sa douceur et sa fierté, avec sa taille et sa démarche majestueuse. La déesse comprit que c’était Télémaque, fils de ce héros. Mais, quoique les dieux surpassent de loin en connaissance tous les hommes, elle ne put découvrir qui était cet homme vénérable dont Télémaque était accompagné : c’est que les dieux supérieurs cachent aux inférieurs tout ce qu’il leur plaît ; et Minerve, qui accompagnait Télémaque sous la figure de Mentor, ne voulait pas être connue de Calypso.
Cependant Calypso se réjouissait d’un naufrage qui mettait dans son île le fils d’Ulysse, si semblable à son père. Elle s’avance vers lui ; et, sans faire semblant de savoir qui il est :
— D’où vous vient - lui dit-elle - cette témérité d’aborder en mon île ? Sachez, jeune étranger, qu’on ne vient point impunément dans mon empire.
Elle tâchait de couvrir sous ces paroles menaçantes la joie de son cœur, qui éclatait malgré elle sur son visage.
Télémaque lui répondit :
— O vous, qui que vous soyez, mortelle ou déesse (quoique à vous voir on ne puisse vous prendre que pour une divinité), seriez-vous insensible au malheur d’un fils, qui, cherchant son père à la merci des vents et des flots, a vu briser son navire contre vos rochers ?
— Quel est donc votre père que vous cherchez ? — reprit la déesse.
Here's the entire thing, from Wikisource, if you want to try a different passage.

Writing Assignments:

Your writing assignments this week are from the midterm. They're due on Tuesday in class. Here's a link to the midterm so you can look back over the essay in which you identified the 12 elements.

MIDTERM: Now you write an essay (at home) of 500 words in which you utilize and label all twelve of these elements yourself. (36 pts) Description, Narration, Warrant, Cause/Effect, Induction, Analogy, Common Ground, Example/Illustration, Process Analysis, Classification, Definition, Policy claim. Remember to label your work -- you can do this after printing it, with a pencil or pen, or you can label it within the document. You may choose one of the following topics:
Production and sale of tobacco must be made illegal.
Monarchy is better than democracy.
Comments should be eliminated from YouTube videos. 

Penelope: "I'm just a REALLY slow weaver!" 
AP LANG: Write an additional essay of 500 words in which you take a clear position on the following issue: Does the author’s identity and biographical info validate or invalidate the content of the essay, or is it possible for the writing to stand on its own? As examples, use “Civil Disobedience” and “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” Does King’s identity make his writing more valid? Does Thoreau’s identity invalidate his?

OR

Oedipus, Antigone, and Creon all break laws. Write an additional essay of 500 words in which you identify which laws they break. Explain who made the laws and analyze the respective characters’ reasons for disobeying them. What do the characters think of these laws? What does Sophocles think? Are these laws still applicable today? Is there still controversy over these laws?

So, to clarify: All of the students need to write a midterm essay, as assigned above, to be turned in on Tuesday in class. AP kids need to write the midterm essay to turn in to me on Tuesday, and an additional essay done in blue or black pen in your composition books (or looseleaf, whatever) chosen from one of the two AP options above. Time yourself at 40 minutes.

Paper:

Due Thursday November 16:
1. Outline Draft
2. Outline Revision
3. Half Draft with comments
4. First Draft with comments
5. Peer revision worksheet and marked up copy from your partner
6. Final draft

Please put everything in a folder or binder or in some way hold it all together, and make sure the folder and every individual element are all labeled clearly with your name.

Quiz:
1. When the Odyssey opens, how many years have passed since the end of the Trojan war?
2. How old was Telemachus the last time he saw his father, and how old is he now?
3. What goddess visits Telemachus disguised as Mentes, and what does she tell him to do?
4. Penelope is tricking the suitor into being more patient. How?
5. What sign appears from the gods during the assembly, and how is it interpreted?
6. According to Nestor, why did the Greeks split up after the fall of Troy?
7. Which brother did Odysseus go with?
8. According to Nestor, what happened to Agamemnon when he got home from the war?
9. What happy couple does Telemachus find in Sparta?
10. What news does he receive there about his father Odysseus?