2021 Odyssey Is Here and It’S Mighty Impressive

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2021 Odyssey Is Here and It’S Mighty Impressive 2021 Odyssey honda.ca/odyssey Whoever said life moves fast nailed it. One minute, they’re crawling towards you. The next, they’re running away. It’s not you – it’s just the way things go. Maybe it’s best to kick things into cruise control, and enjoy as this journey unfolds. Overview 02 Honda Sensing™ Technologies 15 Exterior / Styling 03 Safety 18 Interior 06 Colours & Trims 19 Versatility 07 Warranty 22 Entertainment / Technology 10 The Power of Dreams 23 HondaLink™ and Advanced Connectivity 13 OVERVIEW Premium family function. The updated 2021 Odyssey is here and it’s mighty impressive. Loaded with innovative features and technologies, the Odyssey is your source for convenience, connectivity and tons of fun. With the versatile Magic Slide 2nd-Row Seats™, passenger accessibility and comfort is maximized. To keep everyone on board happy, the Odyssey impressively offers available AT&T Wi-Fi hotspot2,3 and an available advanced Rear Entertainment System with streaming capability. With the available CabinWatch™1 and CabinTalk™1 features, it’s easy to see and communicate with passengers in the rear seats. From information and entertainment to navigation and trip-enhancing convenience, this is one minivan that aims to impress you and any passengers on board. 1. None of the features we describe are intended to replace the driver’s responsibility to exercise due care while driving. Drivers should not use handheld devices or operate certain vehicle features unless it is safe and legal to do so. Some features have technological limitations. For additional feature information, limitations and restrictions, please visit www.honda.ca/disclaimers and refer to the vehicle’s Owner’s Manual. 2. Only compatible with certain devices and operating systems. Operation may be dependent upon: 1. GPS satellite signal reception and available cellular data and/or voice connection; or 2. connection to vehicle’s built-in Wi-Fi hotspot, if applicable. Associated charges (incl. data plans, roaming charges or other amounts charged by your wireless carrier) may apply. 3. New vehicles are equipped with a complimentary time or data trial period, whichever comes first. After the trial period, contact AT&T or visit att.com/honda to purchase available data plans. 4G LTE connection speeds may vary by region. Odyssey Touring in Obsidian Blue Pearl. 2 EXTERIOR/STYLING Up-to-date and up to the task. The updated 2021 Odyssey is the perfect accessory for any family. Its modern design boasts a bold new gloss-black grille and available 2-tone 19" aluminum-alloy wheels. Up front, the Odyssey shines bright with LED daytime running lights, headlights, and fog lights, with LED taillights at the rear, while the available auto-dimming side mirrors help to keep the lights from other drivers from becoming distracting. Late or early, you’ll always arrive fashionably. Key features: LED taillights, LED fog lights, LED daytime running lights and LED headlights, Power sliding doors, New grille, New front bumper, Available 19" aluminum-alloy wheels, Available hands-free power tailgate with programmable height, Available auto-dimming side mirrors Odyssey Touring in Lunar Silver Metallic 4 INTERIOR A exceptional interior. The versatile interior of the Odyssey is perfect for your unpredictable lifestyle. It comes standard with a proximity key entry system with pushbutton start and remote engine starter so you can quickly get on your way. Once inside, the standard 8-passenger seating (with available leather-trimmed seating surfaces) and cavernous cargo room with plenty of storage prove this minivan is far from mini. And if the kids start to fight, don’t fret. In the 2021 Odyssey, you can easily slide them apart with the Magic Slide 2nd-Row Seats.™ These seats easily reconfigure for enhanced passenger comfort, cargo-hauling flexibility and easy access to the third row. In the back, simply pull on the seatback strap of the One-Motion 60/40 Split 3rd-Row Magic Seat® and it effortlessly folds away to create even more cargo space in seconds. While the Magic Slide™ seats help keep the peace, the HondaVAC™ helps keep your Odyssey looking clean. And there’s more fun to be had in the heated front seats. The front passenger’s seat now features available 8-way power adjustment including available 4-way power lumbar support. And the available heated leather- wrapped steering wheel will help keep you cozy on cold morning drives. 6 VERSATILITY Keep the kids well-adjusted. Say hello to your new favourite seat. Well, besides the driver’s seat, of course. The Magic Slide 2nd-Row Seats™ on the 2021 Odyssey enhance the cabin seating flexibility with four, easily reconfigurable modes to keep you and your passengers happy. Standard Seating In Standard Seating Mode, with the centre seat in place, you can comfortably seat 8 passengers. Easy Access Mode With the centre seat removed in Easy Access Odyssey EX-L in Lunar Silver Metallic. Mode, the outboard seats slide laterally through five selectable Buddy Mode positions, allowing In Buddy Mode with the for easy access to the centre seat removed, third row even with you can put two one or two rear-facing passengers together child seats installed and within easier reach in the second row. Separation Mode of the front seats. With the centre seat removed, Separation Mode allows the two outboard seats to slide to their outer- most positions. 8 1 2 3 4 ENTERTAINMENT / TECHNOLOGY Check the tech. 1. Multi-angle rearview camera1 Gone are the days of worrying what the kids are getting up to in the back rows. With available with dynamic guidelines CabinWatch,™1 you can monitor the second row (even with a child in a rear facing car seat) and third row on the 8" centre display, both day and night. Get used to hearing “Are we there yet?” a lot less. The available Advanced Rear Entertainment System with Blu-ray™ player and 2. Available Honda LaneWatch™ streaming capability will keep your passengers amused with the ceiling-mounted, blind spot display1 10.2" display, while two 2nd-row USB chargers and the available 3rd-row USB charger keeps their devices charged. With the available CabinTalk™1 feature, you can get everyone’s 1 5 6 3. Available CabinWatch™ attention by broadcasting your voice to the 2nd- and 3rd-row speakers and headphones. rear seat monitor The 2021 Odyssey is designed to make the guesswork outside of the vehicle a lot easier, too, with features like the available Blind Spot Information (BSI) system1, the available Rear Cross 4. Available CabinTalk™1 in-car PA Traffic Monitor1 system and the multi-angle rearview camera1 with dynamic guidelines. From front to back, the 2021 Odyssey has stunning available tech to help keep everyone on board connected, in control, and happy. 5. Available Blind Spot Information (BSI) system1 Key Features: Apple CarPlay™1,2 / Android Auto,™1,2 Remote engine start, Available CabinTalk™ in-car PA, 6. Available Advanced Rear Available CabinWatch™1 rear seat monitor, Display Audio System1 with available Honda Satellite-Linked Navigation Entertainment System System,™1,3 Available wireless charging, Available 3rd-row USB charger 1. None of the features we describe are intended to replace the driver’s responsibility to exercise due care while driving. Drivers should not use handheld devices or operate certain vehicle features unless it is safe and legal to do so. Some features have technological limitations. For additional feature information, limitations and restrictions, please visit www.honda.ca/disclaimers and refer to the vehicle’s Owner’s Manual. 2. Only compatible with certain devices and operating systems. Operation may be dependent upon: 1. GPS satellite signal reception and available cellular data and/or voice connection; or 2. connection to vehicle’s built-in Wi-Fi hotspot, if applicable. Associated charges (incl. data plans, roaming charges or other amounts charged by your wireless carrier) may apply. 3. Map database covers major metropolitan areas in Canada and the 48 contiguous U.S. states. 10 The 2021 Honda Odyssey is designed for the long haul, with a comfortable ride that will make “Are we there yet?” a question of the past. Odyssey Touring in Crystal Black Pearl. 12 HONDALINK™ AND ADVANCED CONNECTIVITY Work those connections. The Odyssey is just as tech-savvy as you. The available HondaLink™ Subscription Services1,2,3 helps connect you to a world of features both inside and outside of your vehicle, while other available apps and features are designed to entertain and inform. HondaLink™ SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES1,2,3 ADVANCED CONNECTIVITY Remote Start AT&T Wi-Fi Hotspot Enjoy getting into a comfortable car with automatically Connect up to 7 compatible devices with your vehicle’s adjusted climate control. available built-in Wi-Fi hotspot.2,4 Enjoy up to 4G LTE speeds on multiple devices. From the open road, you’ll be able to stream hours of videos, play games, get real-time email access and surf the web. You’ll be able to stay connected up to 50 feet away from your Odyssey. Remote Door Lock/Unlock Whether you’re locked out or forgot to lock up, count on quick, keyless entry and remote assurance from almost anywhere. CabinControl™ app CabinControl™1,2 gives everyone the opportunity to control the rear temperature, add music to a playlist and send an address to the available Honda Satellite-Linked Navigation System™1,5. Geofence Alert Get notified when your car enters or leaves a designated region. “How Much Farther?®” app The available “How Much Farther?®” app5 is a child-friendly navigation tracking App built in to the Rear Entertainment Stolen Vehicle Locator System. Using multiple background themes with animation, Designed to help recover your stolen vehicle faster.
Recommended publications
  • Death and the Afterlife in Homer
    Death and the Afterlife in Homer Death and what happens after death are universal concerns for humanity; around the world different cultures and religions contemplate our existence, and try to make sense of both our place in the world and our deaths. Although we no longer (for the most part) follow the religious beliefs of the ancient Greeks and Romans, their exploration of mortality and the afterlife can nonetheless be emotionally powerful and meaningful for us. In what follows, we will consider the presentation of death and the afterlife in some of the earliest Greek literature, Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey. The most common name for the underworld was Hades, a personified god and brother of Zeus, but also a place to which the souls of departed mortals go. Hades is in fact far more commonly mentioned as the underworld than as a personified god in Greek literature, although we do see him as an actual character in some myths, most famously in the story of the abduction of Persesphone by Hades, a tale told in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter. In post-classical times, the term Hades was adopted by Christian authors, including the early Church Fathers, Dante and Milton, to refer to the Christian concept of Hell. The term used is the same, but it is important to distinguish between the Christian conception of Hell and Hades. For Christians, Hell is a place to which the souls of the wicked descend after death, whereas the souls of the good are taken to Heaven to be with God. The ancient Greek concept is extremely different.
    [Show full text]
  • Myths and Legends: Odysseus and His Odyssey, the Short Version by Caroline H
    Myths and Legends: Odysseus and his odyssey, the short version By Caroline H. Harding and Samuel B. Harding, adapted by Newsela staff on 01.10.17 Word Count 1,415 Level 1030L Escaping from the island of the Cyclopes — one-eyed, ill-tempered giants — the hero Odysseus calls back to the shore, taunting the Cyclops Polyphemus, who heaves a boulder at the ship. Painting by Arnold Böcklin in 1896. SECOND: A drawing of a cyclops, courtesy of CSA Images/B&W Engrave Ink Collection and Getty Images. Greek mythology began thousands of years ago because there was a need to explain natural events, disasters, and events in history. Myths were created about gods and goddesses who had supernatural powers, human feelings and looked human. These ideas were passed down in beliefs and stories. The following stories are about Odysseus, the son of the king of the Greek island of Ithaca and a hero, who was described to be as wise as Zeus, king of the gods. For 10 years, the Greek army battled the Trojans in the walled city of Troy, but could not get over, under or through the walls that protected it. Finally, Odysseus came up with the idea of a large hollow, wooden horse, that would be filled with Greek soldiers. The people of Troy woke one morning and found that no army surrounded the city, so they thought the enemy had returned to their ships and were finally sailing back to Greece. A great horse had been left This article is available at 5 reading levels at https://newsela.com.
    [Show full text]
  • Greek and Roman Perceptions of the Afterlife in Homer's
    McNair Scholars Journal Volume 11 | Issue 1 Article 2 2007 Greek and Roman Perceptions of the Afterlife in Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey and Virgil’s Aeneid Jeff Adams Grand Valley State University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair Recommended Citation Adams, Jeff (2007) Gr" eek and Roman Perceptions of the Afterlife in Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey and Virgil’s Aeneid," McNair Scholars Journal: Vol. 11: Iss. 1, Article 2. Available at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair/vol11/iss1/2 Copyright © 2007 by the authors. McNair Scholars Journal is reproduced electronically by ScholarWorks@GVSU. http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/ mcnair?utm_source=scholarworks.gvsu.edu%2Fmcnair%2Fvol11%2Fiss1%2F2&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages Greek and Roman Perceptions of the Afterlife in Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey and Virgil’s Aeneid Abstract Homer’s Odyssey says that death “is the This study is a literary analysis of way of mortals, whenever one of them Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey and Virgil’s should die, for the tendons no longer Aeneid. Of specific interest are the hold flesh and bones together, but the interactions of Achilles, Odysseus, strong might of blazing fire destroys and Aeneas with their beloved dead. these things as soon as the spirit has left I focused on what each party, both the the white bones, and the soul, having living and the dead, wanted and the flown away like a dream, hovers about.”1 results of their interaction. Methods People have always been fascinated by included reading passages from the death and the afterlife.
    [Show full text]
  • Apollo 13--200,000Miles from Earth
    Apollo13"Houston,we'vegota ­ problem." ­ EP-76,ProducedbytheO fficeofPublicA ffairs ­ NationalAeronauticsandSpaceAdministration ­ W ashington,D.C.20546 ­ U.S.GOVERNM ENT PRINTING OFFICE,1970384-459 ­ NOTE:Nolongerinprint. ­ .pdf version by Jerry Woodfill of the Automation, Robotics, and Simulation Division, Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas 77058 . James A. Lovell, Jr., Commander... Fred W. Haise, Jr., Lunar Module Pilot... John L. Swigeft, Jr., Command Module Pilot. SPACECRAFT--Hey, we've got a problem here. Thus, calmly, Command Module Pilot JackSwigert gave the first intimation of serious trouble for Apollo 13--200,000miles from Earth. CAPSULECOMMUNICATOR--ThisisHouston;say again, please. SC--Houston, we've hada problem. We've hada MainBbusundervolt. By "undervolt"Swigert meant a drop in power in one of the Command/Service Module's two main electrical circuits. His report to the ground began the most grippingepisode in man's venture into space. One newspaper reporter called it the most public emergency and the most dramatic rescue in the history of exploration. SC--Andwe hada pretty large bang associatedwith the cautionandwarning here. Lunar Module Pilot Fred Haise was now on the voice channel from the spacecraft to the Mission Control Center at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Manned Spacecraft Center in Texas. Commander Jim Lovell would shortly be heard, then again Swigert--the backup crewman who had been thrust onto the first team only two days before launch when doctors feared that Tom Mattingly of the primary crew might come down with German measles. Equally cool, the men in Mission Control acknowledged the report and began the emergency procedures that grew into an effort by hundreds of ground controllers and thousands of technicians and scientists in NaSA contractor plants and On university campuses to solve the most complexand urgent problem yet encountered in space flight.
    [Show full text]
  • Analyzing Two Domains of Dionysus in Greek Polytheism
    Philomathes Two Sides of the Dice: Analyzing Two Domains of Dionysus in Greek Polytheism T he study of religion in ancient Greece is complicated by the fact that, unlike modern world religions with ancient roots, there is no “holy doctrine” to which scholars can refer. Although they shared a complex pantheon of gods, ancient Greek city- states were never a unified political empire; instead of a globalized dogma, religion was localized within each polis, whose inhabitants developed their own unique variations on “Greek” religious rituals and beliefs.1 The multiplex natures of ancient Greek gods compounds the problem; it is a monumental task to study all aspects of all deities in the Greek world. As a result, scholarship often focuses solely on a single popular aspect or well-known cult of a god or goddess — such as Apollo Pythios of Delphi or Athena Parthenos of Athens, neglecting other facets of the gods’ cult and personality.2 Greek religion, 1 As Jon D. Mikalson states in Athenian Popular Religion (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1983), 4, “In varying degrees Sparta, Corinth, Thebes, Athens and the other city-states differed from one another in political, social, and economic structure, and it is only reasonable to assume that they also differed in some extent in their religion … One should be wary of assuming that a religious belief or practice must have been current in all the city-states and among all Greek simply because it is attested for one city-state.” 2 Apollo is generally remembered as the god of prophecy because of his oracle and cult in Delphi.
    [Show full text]
  • Inspire Me, Athena, Goddess of Wisdom. Help Me Tell the Story of Odysseus, the Clever Hero Who Traveled Far and Wide After He Ransacked the Famous City of Troy
    Inspire me, Athena, Goddess of Wisdom. Help me tell the story of Odysseus, the clever hero who traveled far and wide after he ransacked the famous city of Troy. He suffered greatly at sea, fighting for his life and the lives of his men, hop- ing for a safe homecoming. But he could not save his companions, as hard as he tried. The Greek warriors who escaped sudden death in battle or shipwreck sailed for home. They conquered Troy and were now out of harm’s way . except Odysseus. He longed to return to his wife and country. But the bewitching goddess Calypso held him back. She kept Odysseus in her cave, hoping to have him as her husband. All the gods took pity on Odysseus, except Poseidon, god of the earth-circling sea, who seethed with unending anger. Poseidon was determined not to let him get home. But Poseidon had gone to visit the Ethiopians, at the 1 2 HOMER end of the world. While he was off enjoying him- self, the other gods met in the house of Zeus. Since he was the father of gods and men, Zeus spoke first. He was thinking of one of his favorites, Aegisthus, who had been killed by Agamemnon’s son Orestes, “Why do men blame the gods for their own foolishness? Aegisthus could not resist making love to Agamemnon’s wife. Then he killed Agamem- non, though he knew it meant his own death. I even sent Hermes, messenger of the gods, to warn Aegisthus. Agamemnon’s son, Orestes, was sure to take revenge when he grew up and wanted to return home.
    [Show full text]
  • Herakles and the Idea of the Hero Corinne Ondine Pache Trinity University, [email protected]
    Trinity University Digital Commons @ Trinity Classical Studies Faculty Research Classical Studies Department 7-2014 Herakles and the Idea of the Hero Corinne Ondine Pache Trinity University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/class_faculty Part of the Classics Commons Repository Citation Pache, C. (2014, July). Herakles and the idea of the hero. Retrieved from http://youstories.com/resources/detail/essay--heracles-and- the-idea-of-the-hero This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Classical Studies Department at Digital Commons @ Trinity. It has been accepted for inclusion in Classical Studies Faculty Research by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Trinity. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HERAKLES AND THE IDEA OF THE HERO By Corinne Pache The son of a divine father, Zeus, Already in Homer’s Odyssey, and a mortal mother, Alkmene, Herakles is portrayed as the Herakles is often described by preeminent hero of the past, ancient sources as the greatest against whom even the great of the Greek heroes. When we Achilles and Odysseus measure think of Herakles (or Hercules, themselves. Yet Homer does not as the Romans called him) in the shy away from the more modern world, we remember troubling aspects of Herakles; in primarily his labors, and perhaps the Odyssey, the hero is described a few other legends surrounding as “the strong-hearted son of him, such as the one about how Zeus, the mortal Herakles, guilty his supernatural strength allowed of monstrous deeds, who killed him, even as a baby, to strangle Iphitus when he was a guest in the two massive snakes sent to his house” (Odyssey 21.25-27); kill him in the cradle by the ever- while in the Iliad, he is the jealous goddess Hera.
    [Show full text]
  • Odyssey Translated Byrobertfitzgerald Homer from the Xenia, Wasveryimportantingreek NOTES from the ANCHOR TEXT|EPICPOEM Odyssey, Part2 MULTIMEDIA SCAN FOR
    ANCHOR TEXT | EPIC POEM from the Odyssey Homer translated by Robert Fitzgerald Part 2 The Return of Odysseus BACKGROUND The Greek concept of hospitality, xenia, was very important in Greek SCAN FOR culture and plays a role in Odysseus’ tale. Some scholars believe that MULTIMEDIA this value is based on Greek religious belief. Since the Greek gods could take multiple earthly forms, there was always the possibility that the stranger at the door was a god in disguise. Thus, Greeks opened their homes to strangers. In Part 2, as Odysseus returns home, it is clear that this cultural practice has created some problems. “Twenty years gone, and I am back again . .” NOTES Odysseus has finished telling his story to the Phaeacians. The next day, young Phaeacian noblemen conduct him home by ship. He arrives in Ithaca after an absence of twenty years. The goddess Athena appears and informs him of the situation © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All rights reserved. or its affiliates. Inc., Education, © Pearson at home. Numerous suitors, believing Odysseus to be dead, have been continually seeking the hand of his wife, Penelope, in marriage, while overrunning Odysseus’ palace and enjoying themselves at Penelope’s expense. Moreover, they are plotting to from the Odyssey, Part 2 595 murder Odysseus’ son, Telemachus, before he can inherit his father’s NOTES lands. Telemachus, who, like Penelope, still hopes for his father’s return, has journeyed to Pylos and Sparta to learn what he can about 1. Eumaeus (yoo MEE uhs) his father’s fate. Athena disguises Odysseus as a beggar and directs him to the hut of Eumaeus,1 his old and faithful swineherd.
    [Show full text]
  • Bath Time: Three Homeric Bathing Scenes and Greek Marriage This Paper Argues That Aphrodite's Extended Toilette Type-Scene (Bath
    Bath Time: Three Homeric Bathing Scenes and Greek Marriage This paper argues that Aphrodite's extended toilette type-scene (bathing and dressing) in the fifth Homeric Hymn, the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite (hAphr. 58-63) reflects traditional practices of a Greek bride preparing for her wedding and promoting her fertility. Recent scholarship has shown that the scene shares common language and themes with Hera's toilette as preparation to seduce Zeus in Iliad XIV and Aphrodite's toilette in Demodokos' song the Lay of Aphrodite and Ares in Odyssey viii. S.D. Olson in his text and commentary on the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite lists common language between the Hymn and the Homeric epics, writing that the poem "interacts creatively and often aggressively with the Iliad and the Odyssey in particular, the most obvious example of the tendency being perhaps 59-68, which rework and combine Aphrodite's visit to Paphos after she and Ares are caught in bed together by Hephaistos in Odyssey 8, on the one hand, and Hera's retreat into her bedchamber to prepare to seduce Zeus in Iliad 14, on the other" (Olson, 2012). In the Hymn, Aphrodite shuts the doors of her temple before beginning her toilette. The shutting of the doors is in language (hAphr. 60) exactly matching that of the identical action during Hera's toilette in preparation to seduce Zeus in Iliad XIV (Il. 14.169) entha he g'eiselthousa thyras epetheke phainas. Cora Sowa noted that all three works, the Hymn, the hieros gamos of Iliad XIV, and the Lay share numerous common motifs which she laid out in tabular form (Sowa, 1984).
    [Show full text]
  • The Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School
    The Haberdashers’ Aske’s Boys’ School Occasional Papers Series in the Humanities Occasional Paper Number Forty Persephone’s Odyssey: Nature and the Supernatural in the Odyssey and Homeric Hymn 2 A.C. Gray [email protected] November 2020 1 A Haberdashers’ Aske’s Occasional Paper. All rights reserved. Haberdashers’ Aske’s Occasional Paper Number Forty November 2020 All rights reserved Persephone’s Odyssey Nature and the Supernatural in the Odyssey and Homeric Hymn 2 A.C. Gray Abstract Although Homeric Hymn 2 (Εἲς Δημήτραν) is not often read for its similarities to the Odyssey, it is impossible to deny that the two poems have myriad details in common. In this paper, I consider one fairly complex axis for comparison: the poems share a similar view of death, the natural world, and the supernatural. This interrelationship provides one way to examine archaic Greek religion in the pre-philosophic era, proposing patterns that may have been consistent in early Greek thought regarding the danger of divine elements in nature, the dead and consumption in the underworld, and morality and “evil” among the gods. The unifying thread is the interaction between human beings and the supernatural, that is to say, natural elements that go above and beyond their ordinary capabilities. 1. Introduction Most people are familiar with the story of the Odyssey, at least, in the broadest strokes. Odysseus is a Greek soldier (from Ithaca) who took part in the Trojan War as described in Homer's Iliad. He spends many years trying to get home following the end of the war, continually thwarted by the god Poseidon, who nurses a grudge against him.
    [Show full text]
  • Literary Elements and Language Terms: Greek Epics
    Welcome Back! **Please make a note on your calendar, the reading homework for January 10 should be Books 11 AND 16. Literary Elements and Language Terms: Greek Epics English II Pre-AP THE OLYMPIANS AND THEIR ROLE IN HOMER’S ILIAD THE OLYMPIANS 1. Zeus (Jupiter) 8. Hermes (Mercury) 2. Hera (Juno) 9. Artemis (Diana) 3. Demeter (Ceres) 10. Ares (Mars) 4. Hades (Pluto) 11. Pallas Athena (Minerva) 5. Hestia (Vesta) 12. Hephaestus (Vulcan) 6. Poseidon (Neptune) 13. Aphrodite (Venus) 7. Phoebus Apollo THE ROLE OF THE GODS… Ancient Greece was a polytheistic culture versus today’s more monotheistic culture. The Greeks see the gods as: Awe-inspiring Dangerous Powerful beings whom it is wise not to offend Homer uses the gods to underscore the tragedy of the human condition. Often in the Iliad, the gods and goddesses are portrayed as shallow, petty, etc. They complain, and fight amongst themselves. They watch the war, and may even get involved in points, but they can’t be seriously hurt by this war. This highlights the tragedy of human courage and self sacrifice that will happen throughout the course of the epic. THE HOMERIC GODS ARE NOT… consistently good, or merciful, or even just omniscient (all-seeing) omnipotent (all-powerful) transcendent – they did not create the universe, but are part of it in relationships with humans which are based on mutual love able to override fate THE HOMERIC GODS ARE… personified forces of nature on the most basic level (Ex: Ares is war) the controllers of these forces of nature anthropomorphic – they share human form, human passions, and human emotions THE GODS AND FATE (MOIRA)… Moira roughly translates as “share of life” Generally, a human does not know their moira ahead of time The gods seems to know the individual’s moira (Ex: Thetis knows Achilles’ fate, Zeus knows Achilles will kill Hector) However, the gods are part of the system.
    [Show full text]
  • Notes for the Penelopiad
    NOTES FOR THE PENELOPIAD Use this guide to assist you while reading Margaret Atwood’s The Penelopiad. This guide will provide you with important information about different characters, events, and references. MARGARET ATWOOD Canadian author Margaret Atwood is a prolific and award-winning novelist, poet, short story writer, essayist, and critic. From a young age, Atwood has been keenly interested in mythology and folk/fairy tales, which inspire much of her poetry. Atwood is one of Canada’s most famous and respected literary figures. Published in October 2005, Atwood’s original novella The Penelopiad was part of a Canongate series of myths retold by contemporary authors. The Penelopiad reexamines Homer’s epic story the Odyssey through a variety of genres: narrative, a classic Greek chorus, various types of poetry and song, and modern settings including a court trial and an anthropology lecture. THE PENELEOPIAD The layout of this novel is characterized by monologues and narration from Penelope in the underworld, flashbacks to important events in Penelope's life, and poetic and musical segments from the maids, both in the underworld and during the flashback. The story begins with Penelope alone in the Greek underworld of the dead. Penelope, the wife of Odysseus and renowned for her faithfulness, has decided to tell her side of the famous Odyssey story. Penelope is haunted in the underworld by the spirits of her twelve maids, the ones who Odysseys ordered to be killed upon his return to Ithaca. HOMER Like Shakespeare, Homer is a highly influential but extremely mysterious literary figure. His exact birthdate is unknown, and seven cities in Greece all claim to be his birthplace.
    [Show full text]