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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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This was super hard for me too!
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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18. The author suggests that the variety of incidents in the Odyssey is likely to deter the reader from.

(A) concentrating on the poem's mythological features

Odyssey has always been more popular than the Iliad, perhaps because it includes more features of mythology that are accessible to readers.

The features are more accessible. The passage does not show that the spectator must concentrate more

(B) concentrating on the psychological states of the poem's central character

Odyssey is "life-as-spectacle. Iliad, on the contrary, is "life-experience" which means that the spectator must concentrate LESS, and identify LESS with the state of mind of the protagonist. I.E. Odyssey is effortless as a book for the reader

(C) accepting the explanations that have been offered for the poem's popularity

I do not know what that means but I do not see in the passage


(D) accepting the poem's scheme of divine justice

Odyssey, with its simpler scheme of divine justice.

The passage asserts exactly the contrary of what D as questions suggests us

(E) accepting Maynard Mack's theory that the poem's subject is "life-as-spectacle"

Not really the accepting
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
it was hard
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
deli wrote:
it was hard


One cannot expect anything less than that from the official source! :)
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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There is nothing hard.

You have to find only the way to read carefully and thinking about what you read.

It is that simple, in the end.

Regards
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
Carcass wrote:
There is nothing hard.

You have to find only the way to read carefully and thinking about what you read.

It is that simple, in the end.

Regards



May be not hard but difficult ?
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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17. The author uses Mack's "categories" most probably in order to
(C) suggest one way in which the Iliad and the Odyssey can be distinguished
Correct
(E) demonstrate that the Iliad and the Odyssey can best be distinguished by comparing their respective heroes
Incorrect trap answer- Passage does not say this is the best way


18. The author suggests that the variety of incidents in the Odyssey is likely to deter the reader from.
POE
(B) concentrating on the psychological states of the poem's central character
Correct- diverted by its various incidents, observe its hero Odysseus primarily from without;

19. The passage is primarily concerned with
(E) developing a contrast
Correct- this is clearly the theme

20. It can be inferred from the passage that a reader of the Iliad is likely to have trouble identifying with the poem's hero for which of the following reasons?
(D) The hero's emotions often do not seem appealing to the reader.
correct: readers are asked to identify with the mind of Achilles,
whose motivations render him a not particularly likable
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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Its subject (to use Maynard Mack's categories) is "life-as-spectacle," for readers, diverted by its various incidents, observe its hero Odysseus primarily from without; the tragic Iliad, however, presents "life-experience": readers are asked to identify with the mind of Achilles, whose motivations render him a not particularly likable hero.


The sentence structure is messed up. Who writes like this???

Anyway, can someone tell me what "from without" means?
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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EKKIM wrote:
Quote:
Its subject (to use Maynard Mack's categories) is "life-as-spectacle," for readers, diverted by its various incidents, observe its hero Odysseus primarily from without; the tragic Iliad, however, presents "life-experience": readers are asked to identify with the mind of Achilles, whose motivations render him a not particularly likable hero.


The sentence structure is messed up. Who writes like this???

Anyway, can someone tell me what "from without" means?



If you did notice the source of the question you should know that OG Big Book means ETS, who creates the GRE test.

So I do not think the question is bogus whatsoever
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
from without - archaic English usage. This means "outside".
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
Carcass, for Q2, can you please clarify whether perceive hero from without means not able to concentrate on the psychological states of the poem's central character?
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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tkorzhan18 wrote:
Carcass, for Q2, can you please clarify whether perceive hero from without means not able to concentrate on the psychological states of the poem's central character?



I addressed above.

https://gre.myprepclub.com/forum/of-homer- ... tml#p37574

please read the discussions before, and see if the questions are not already explained

Thank you
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Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
Can someone explain the meaning of the line -" readers are asked to identify with the mind of Achilles, whose motivations render him a not particularly likable hero". What does the author mean by the mind of Achilles?
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
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Vedant1807 wrote:
Can someone explain the meaning of the line -" readers are asked to identify with the mind of Achilles, whose motivations render him a not particularly likable hero". What does the author mean by the mind of Achilles?


The readers of the Iliad should put themselves in the place of Achille, I.E. in Achille's shoes to understand his motivation and why, due to these motivations, he is likable

Regards
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Re: Of Homer's two epic poems, the Odyssey has always been more [#permalink]
For Q20: I know this strategy (for inference questions) that we have to make a contrast with the information already "GIVEN" in the passage. I agree that D could be inferred as well for the reason mentioned in the explanations, BUT option E could be an inference as well for the contrast with Odysseus - for readers, diverted by its various incidents, observe its hero Odysseus primarily from without. So the opposite of that would be there are fewer incidents in Iliad to capture the reader.

Where am I lacking with my logic or understanding of the nuance attached to the question?
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