|
This section includes: Notes
| Text
Notes:
-
Though the origin of the Hellenes, or ancient Greeks, is unknown, their
language clearly belongs to the Indo-European family.
-
By serving as a basis for education, the Iliad and
Odyssey played a role in the development of Greek civilization
that is equivalent to the role that the Torah had played in
Palestine.
- The Greeks who established colonies in Asia
adapted their language to the Phoenician writing system,
adding signs for vowels to change it from a consonantal
to an alphabetic system.
-
Before its defeat to Sparta, Athens developed democratic institutions
to maintain the delicate balance between the freedom of the individual
and the demands of the state.
-
Unlike the Sophists, Socrates proposed a method of teaching that was
dialectic rather than didactic; his means of approaching "truth"
through questions and answers revolutionized Greek philosophy.
-
The basis for Homer's Iliad and Odyssey was an immense
poetic reserve created by generations of singers who lived before him.
-
Neither the Iliad nor the Odyssey offers easy
answers; questions about the nature of aggression and violence are left
unanswered, and questions about human suffering and the waste generated
by war are left unresolved.
-
Greek comedy and tragedy developed out of choral performances in
celebration of Dionysus, the god of wine and mystic ecstasy.
Text:
* blue words within the text indicate important notes to remember
-
Though the origin of the Hellenes, or ancient Greeks, is unknown,
their language clearly belongs to the Indo-European family. Named
after the mythical king Minos, the Minoan civilization flourished on
the island of Crete in the second millennium B.C. In the same period,
the Myceneans developed a wealthy and powerful civilization on mainland
Greece. At some point in the last century of the millennium, the great
palaces were destroyed by fire. With them, the arts, skills, and
language of the Myceneans vanished for the next few centuries, a period
called the "Dark Age" of Greece. Much of what we know about them is
based on the body of oral poetry that became the raw material for
Homer's epic poems, the Iliad and Odyssey.
- By
serving as a basis for education, the Iliad and
Odyssey played a role in the development of Greek
civilization that is equivalent to the role that the Torah
had played in Palestine. The irreconcilable difference
between the Greeks gods of Olympus and the Hebrew god led
to a struggle from which only one survived. For those raised
under monotheistic religions or cultures, the Greek gods
and their relation to humanity may seem alien. Whereas the
Hebrews blamed humanity for bringing disorder to God's
harmoniously ordered universe, the Greeks conceived their
gods as an expression of the disorder of the world and its
uncontrollable forces. To the Greeks, morality is a human
invention; and though Zeus is the most powerful of their
gods, even he can be resisted by his fellow Olympians and
must bow to the mysterious power of fate.
- Though united by
their common Hellenic heritage, Greek city-states differed
in customs, political constitutions, and dialects. They
were often rivals and fierce competitors, establishing colonies
in the eighth and seventh centuries along the Mediterranean
coast. The Greeks who established colonies
in Asia adapted their language to the Phoenician writing
system, adding signs for vowels to change it from a consonantal
to an alphabetic system. First used for commercial
documents, writing was later applied to treaties, political
decrees, and, later, literature.
-
Inspired by their defeat of the Persian invaders, Athens and Sparta
emerged as the two most prominent city-states of the fifth century
B.C. With the elimination of their common enemy, however, the two
cities became enemies, culminating in the Peloponnesian war, which left
Athens defeated. Before its defeat to Sparta, Athens developed
democratic institutions to maintain the delicate balance between the
freedom of the individual and the demands of the state. By the
time of Sophocles, Athens had become an empire, establishing a league
of subject cities, which it taxed and coerced.
- Professional teachers,
called Sophists, educated affluent male citizens of Athens
in the techniques of public speaking and in subjects such
as government, ethics, literary criticism, and astronomy.
The secular and humanist spirit of Athenian culture is best
expressed in the words of the Sophist Protagoras: "Man
is the measure of all things." Unlike
the Sophists, Socrates proposed a method of teaching that
was dialectic rather than didactic; his means of approaching
"truth" through questions and answers revolutionized
Greek philosophy. Socrates exposed illogicality in
old beliefs but did not provide new beliefs. His ethics
rested on an intellectual basis. Due to his insistence that
it is the duty of each individual to think through to the
"truth," resentment against Socrates built, culminating
in a death for impiety. In the next century, Athens became
a center for schools of philosophy based on his ideas, especially
as espoused by Plato and Aristotle. Founder of the Academy
in 385 B.C., Plato's literary and philosophical contributions
often explored ethical and political problems of his time
featuring his teacher Socrates as speaker. The first systematic
work of Western literary criticism, the Poetics,
was written by Aristotle, a member of Plato's Academy.
-
Except for his name, we know nothing about the poet Homer, and there is
no trace of his identity in the poem. The basis for Homer's
Iliad and Odyssey was an immense poetic reserve created
by generations of singers who lived before him. Homer made use of
an intricate system of metrical formulas, a repertoire of standard
scenes, and a known outline of the story. Unlike most oral literature,
the poetic organization of the two works suggests they owe their
present form to the hand of one poet.
-
Focused around the events that transpired in a few weeks of the
ten-year Trojan War, the Iliad tells the story of the Achaeans
and Trojans in war. Both gendersthe men who do battle and the women
who depend on themare affected in this tale of war. Starkly
unsentimental, Homer's tale suggests that human beings must
implicitly deal with both destructive and creative impulses. The
Odyssey deals with the peace that ensued and places emphases on
the lives of the surviving heroes of the war. It tells the story of
Odysseus on a quest to return to his homeland, Ithaca, and be reunited
with his son and wife. Along the way, he has many adventures and must
rely on his intellect, wit, and strength to extricate himself from
perilous situations. Neither the Iliad nor the
Odyssey offers easy answers; questions about the nature of
aggression and violence are left unanswered, and questions about human
suffering and the waste generated by war are left unresolved.
-
Though Sappho's lyric poems give us vivid evocation of the joys and
sorrows of love, it is the drama that emerged more than a century later
that is most closely associated with classical Greek literature.
Greek comedy and tragedy developed out of choral performances in
celebration of Dionysus, the god of wine and mystic ecstasy.
Thespis was probably the first to add a masked actor, who engages in
dialogue with the chorus, to these performance; later Aeschylus added a
second actor, creating the possibility for conflict and establishing
the prototype for drama as we know it. The seven plays of Aeschylus
are the earliest documents in the history of Western theater. While
Aeschylus's plays reflect Athens's heroic period, those by his younger
contemporary Sophocles, especially Oedipus the King, reflect a
culture that was reevaluating critically its accepted standards and
traditions. Even more so, Euripides's Medea is an ironic
expression of Athenian disillusion. The work of the only surviving
comic poet of the fifth century, Aristophanes, combines poetry,
obscenity, farce, and wit to satirize institutions and personalities of
his time. Though parodic in tone, the work often carries serious
undertones, thus adding to the rich diversity of writings from the
ancient Greek world.
|