Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Elements of an Epic

Wednesday 31 January 2018 for Periods 5 & 6 and Thursday 1 February 2018 for Periods 1, 2, & 7

Membean Vocabulary Drills:  10 minutes

Students continued reading Tales from the Odyssey.

Homework:   Read over the following elements of an epic poem:


Epic poems exist in cultures around the world, often having roots in preliterate times.

Essential Characteristics

·      Long narrative poem

o   The work may be paraphrased into prose, but it began in verse.

·      Omniscient narrator

o   The speaker of the poem appears to know about all the characters thoughts and feelings.

·      Panoramic setting

o   The story covers events in a vast geographic region, even taking in the known world or universe.

·      Hero

o   The protagonist of the story gains the audience’s admiration through great deeds.

o   The hero typically has a quest and goes on a journey to achieve that goal.

o   The hero is someone of national or international importance.

·      Supernatural Involvement

o   Gods or other supernatural beings participate in the action or take an active interest.

·      Elevated Style

o   The speaker uses

§  formal language, not conversational

§  serious and objective tone (attitude toward the characters and the action)

§  great detail



Common Story-telling Conventions



·       Invocation—the poet-narrator asks for supernatural help in telling the story.

·       medias res—the story begins in the middle of the action.

·       Long speeches—main characters often speak at length, revealing their traits.

·       Meter—the poet uses a set rhythmic pattern to aid in remembering the story

·       Figurative language

o   Epic similes—long comparisons made over many lines.

o   Epithets--an adjective or descriptive phrase expressing a quality characteristic of the person or thing mentioned; often repeated to aid memory or complete meter

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