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Iliad
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Homer's Iliad is one of the foundational texts of Western literature, studied in courses ranging from classical literature and world literature surveys to philosophy and humanities seminars. The epic centers on a concentrated episode of the Trojan War, tracing the rage of Achilles and its devastating consequences for Greeks and Trojans alike. What makes it academically compelling is its simultaneous engagement with large themes — mortality, honor, grief, and the relationship between humans and gods — and its intimate psychological portraits of figures such as Achilles, Hector, and Agamemnon. Its influence extends across later works, inviting comparison with Homer's Odyssey, Virgil's Aeneid, Dante's writing, and even Arthurian legend.

Student essays on the Iliad tend to approach the text through close reading, thematic analysis, and comparative study. Some papers focus tightly on specific passages or books, such as the similes in Achilles' pursuit of Hector or the embassy scene in Book 9. Others examine the role of divine figures like Athena in shaping warrior identity and the poem's moral framework. Comparative essays frequently place Homer alongside later epic traditions, tracing how characters and themes are transformed across texts and cultures.

A strong essay on the Iliad establishes a focused, arguable thesis rather than broadly summarizing the plot. Textual evidence drawn from specific scenes, speeches, and imagery carries the most weight, particularly when analyzed for what it reveals about character motivation or thematic tension. The most common pitfall is treating the gods as mere background decoration — their interventions are central to the poem's meaning and deserve sustained, specific analysis.

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Paper Doctorate
The metaphor of leaves as men in classical and modern literature
¶ … Fall to Spring's Sprouting: The Motif of Man as Leaves in Literature and the Emergence of Autonomy as Divine
Research Paper Undergraduate
Book Review: Burgess on Homer and the Epic Cycle
In Tradition of the Trojan War in Homer and the Epic Cycle, Jonathan S. Burgess provides a detailed account of the poetry of Homer, and how that poetry was both influenced by, and influenced itself, the poetry since…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Translating the Iliad Into More
Translating the Iliad into more contemporary language, with a dramatic change in setting presents many challenges. The first is to decide the degree to which the work needs to be translated.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The Odyssey and ancient Greek society
By the later part of the Greek "Dark Age," circa 800 B.C.E., ideas and traditions linked to the social/cultural arena of ancient Greece concerning the organization of their communities and the proper behavior expected…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Religions of East Asia; Including
Religions of East Asia; Including Native Religions, Daoism, Confucianism, And Shinto
Paper Undergraduate
Odyssey Homer\'s Odyssey Reveals Much
Homer's Odyssey reveals much about the lives of ancient Greeks. Each of Homer's main characters is imbued with attributes that, when interactions with other characters occur, indicates the moral code and norms in…
Paper Doctorate
Access to Courts for Guantanamo
A peacetime government owes to its predecessor wartime government the time and trouble to study and evaluate the costs spent to bring peace to its tenure. War destroys not only lives and things, but also the ideals of a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Black figure panel amphora
Panel Amphora At The Dallas Museum Of Art
Paper Undergraduate
Homers Odyssey Homer\'s Odyssey Continues
Homer's Odyssey continues in the spirit of divine intervention the Iliad has set forth. The gods, mighty characters that dispose of human lives as they fancy, are far from perfect creatures, destined to see that divine…
Paper Undergraduate
Meeting of Opposites John Milton\'s
John Milton's world in Paradise Lost is God's world -- a world that is highly ordered, fundamentally hierarchical and relentlessly dualistic. It is a world in which everything has a pair, an opposite, a mirror image.