A Long and Difficult Journey, or The Odyssey: Crash Course Literature 201

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  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2024
  • In which John Green teaches you about Homer's Odyssey. If it was Homer's If Homer was even real. Anyway, that stuff doesn't really matter. John teaches you the classic, by which I mean classical, epic poem, the Odyssey. The Journey of Odysseus as he made his way home after the conclusion of the Trojan War is the stuff of legend. Literally. John will teach you about the double standard in Greek culture, Odysseus as jerk/hero, ancient PTSD, and cycles of violence. Also, there are no yogurt jokes. So think of that as a gift.
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Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @abigailrosebrock7184
    @abigailrosebrock7184 Před 8 lety +6029

    This is me wondering if anybody else just watches these for pleasure and not to get out of reading for a class.......

    • @jacob_massengale
      @jacob_massengale Před 8 lety +193

      i watch them for fun :}

    • @aeriev2256
      @aeriev2256 Před 8 lety +102

      Don't need them -- but they're entertaining

    • @chasaano
      @chasaano Před 7 lety +73

      i watched it because i love ancient greece

    • @annieranai2198
      @annieranai2198 Před 7 lety +39

      I've been out of school for years, and I really enjoy the CC series 😊

    • @2b-coeur
      @2b-coeur Před 7 lety +22

      Me! Last night I randomly decided to marathon a bunch of these and some TED-Ed videos because I kept finding one that looked interesting XD

  • @davidyaconis7002
    @davidyaconis7002 Před 8 lety +2508

    Took ten years to complete a trip that should've taken two weeks.
    Still 4x more efficient than the Hebrews.

    • @KajiRider1997
      @KajiRider1997 Před 8 lety +170

      +David Yaconis Random Hebrew: Moses! Hey Moses! Moses, are we there yet? Moses: NO! You've been asking that for 39 years! stop asking!

    • @2167matthew
      @2167matthew Před 8 lety +84

      The Hebrews were delayed due the God not allowing any generation who had left Egypt for the promise land to actually SEE the promise land, not till the last one died get they get there, Moses didn't even see the land of milk and honey

    • @sandrarocha2969
      @sandrarocha2969 Před 8 lety +20

      +David Yaconis um dude Odesseus had to go through a long journey cuz he got lost at sea cyclops ate his crew and he has to go threw monsters and he was so close one time to getting home but the wind strating to get harsh and the ship flew all the way to another place

    • @waynecronin428
      @waynecronin428 Před 7 lety +29

      David Yaconis At least the Hebrews got to survive and reach their land. All of Odysseus' crew get killed and Odysseus' barely survives Charybdis.

    • @carterspang5477
      @carterspang5477 Před 7 lety +12

      Wayne Cronin they really didn't. it took generations for the hebrews to get from egypt to the promise land. almost none of the original freed slaves were alive.

  • @JaylukKhan
    @JaylukKhan Před 9 lety +1215

    I'd just like to point out that Odysseus' sleeping around was necessary for his survival. If a powerful goddess like Circe or Calypso wants to have sex with you, you don't have much choice. If you reject them, it could spell doom for you, or your loved ones. Horny gods punishing mortals for denying them sex is a recurring theme throughout Classical Mythology.

  • @clenaong7519
    @clenaong7519 Před 5 lety +371

    *Odysseus blinds cyclops
    "Noman is hurting me, noman is hurting me"
    a BLINDINGLY good pun

  • @Midorikonokami
    @Midorikonokami Před 7 lety +1410

    THE LIBRARY OF ALEXANDRIA *cries for six years*

    • @BiaRikki
      @BiaRikki Před 7 lety +50

      SAME MY HEART FELL ON THE FLOOR WHEN HE MENTIONED IT

    • @sephhaze
      @sephhaze Před 7 lety +2

      i see u johanna

    • @BiaRikki
      @BiaRikki Před 7 lety +1

      Excuse me, who are you?

    • @sephhaze
      @sephhaze Před 7 lety +3

      a supernatural trippy illusion

    • @Frieedrich
      @Frieedrich Před 7 lety +3

      Don't try to fool us. You are obviously a diamond.

  • @saralarner6507
    @saralarner6507 Před 9 lety +314

    The Odyssey is Homer un-writing the Iliad. When Odysseus raids, cheats, and behaves generally like a Iliadic hero he is at his weakest (and at the beginning of his odyssey). By the end he refuses to cheat on his wife with the incredible fantastic Nausica, he shows almost inhuman patience and self-control in the face of the suitors' abuse, and he choses nostos over kleos, the choice Achilles couldn't stand to make. What's more, Achilles himself discredits the entire premise of the Iliad when Odysseus sees him down in the land of the dead, by saying that "it is better to be the lowest slave than king among all the unnumbered dead."
    And he doesn't "lie to everyone he knows." His Cretan narratives are really important, non-violent defenses against a situation similar to Agamemnon and Clytemnestra.

  • @arturrheinboldt2207
    @arturrheinboldt2207 Před 6 lety +315

    >Odysseus is literally made Calypso's stud
    >Forced to have hot divine sex every day for seven years
    >Calypso asking him every day to live as an immortal with her
    >Odysseus STILL wants to go back to Ithaca and Penelope
    >He goes to the water and cries every day looking out towards Ithaca
    Odysseus' devotion to his wife and people is superhuman, that's why he's the hero.
    some nice piece of information I found on the web

  • @clotildevivier8650
    @clotildevivier8650 Před 8 lety +391

    The Odd At Sea.

  • @tensequel7818
    @tensequel7818 Před 7 lety +200

    " noman is hurting me!"
    "noman is killing me"
    lmao that part was hilarious

    • @jordynnrios7447
      @jordynnrios7447 Před 4 lety +1

      heheheheehehehhehehehhehheheeehhhhheheheheheheheheheheheheheheheheh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @speed0383
      @speed0383 Před 4 lety +2

      It actually happened

  • @jerrodplummer6850
    @jerrodplummer6850 Před 8 lety +96

    So even Odysseus, who is wise enough to be praised by Athena for his wisdom, loses himself in war. Does that say something about our attraction to war?

  • @artstsym
    @artstsym Před 6 lety +36

    Some fun Odyssey notes:
    Circe doesn't give directions to Ithica after Helios' island, implying that she's well aware of how the journey will go.
    Odysseus has been gone for 20 years, and beyond that his wife has remained totally faithful before the advances of somewhere around 100 men over the last 3, but he still decides to observe and judge her in disguise. The only reason he doesn't immediately reveal himself to his son is because he's worried about word getting back to Penelope.
    The people that finally deliver Odysseus to his homeland are turned to stone by Poseidon for their troubles, and the only thing that stops him from wiping out their city entirely is Zeus going "c'mon, man, tone it down a bit."

  • @harrietmilton8397
    @harrietmilton8397 Před 8 lety +66

    One time in like fourth grade my teachers were reading the Odyssey aloud while the class illustrated it, and right before the slaying of the suitors, the teacher, Daniel, Looks at the class and says, "Ok kids, sharpen up your red pencils."

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  Před 10 lety +333

    In which John Green teaches you about Homer's Odyssey. If it was Homer's. If Homer was even real. Anyway, that stuff doesn't really matter. John teaches you the classic, by which I mean classical, epic poem, the Odyssey. The Journey of Odysseus as he made his way home after the conclusion of the Trojan War is the stuff of legend. Literally. John will teach you about the double standard in Greek culture, Odysseus as jerk/hero, ancient PTSD, and cycles of violence. Also, there are no yogurt jokes. So think of that as a gift.
    Our Subbable lead sponsor this week is Damian Shaw, who wants to thank Bryonie, Stew, Maureen, Peter & Morgan for their support.
    Our Subbable co-sponsors are:
    Max Loutzenheiser
    Katy Cocco
    A Long and Difficult Journey, or The Odyssey: Crash Course Literature 201

    • @Incognito11200
      @Incognito11200 Před 10 lety +21

      Nonamearisto
      Big deal.
      Quit bitching.

    • @tabula_rosa
      @tabula_rosa Před 10 lety +32

      Nonamearisto So, criticising a man who cheats on his wife and then murders all of his maids for having had sex makes him leftist? That says more about you than it does John Green.

    • @tabula_rosa
      @tabula_rosa Před 10 lety +8

      Nonamearisto Except that that's not what it was. They fucked some suitors. Have you read the story, or is every woman who has sex a nazi in your mind?

    • @jorgemedina8377
      @jorgemedina8377 Před 10 lety +17

      Deshara I don't think that is nonamearisto's point. I think he's chafing at the overly simplistic analysis of the poem that John gives. I do however also reject his characterization of this analysis as 'radical left-wing' as overly simplistic. I would characterize it more as 'present-centric,' which is surprising given that John has done countless Crash Course History videos. As to the hanging of the maids, that was just what you did in those days to anyone who fraternized with the enemy, male or female. Notice that even the 'nice' suitors (Amphinomous being a prime example) end up dead. This is my main problem with the analysis. John's 3 main points ('The Odyssey is sexist', 'The Odyssey is violent' and 'Odysseus is an asshole') are so painfully obvious I don't really need a 12-minute video to explain them to me. John could have done a far better job by acknowledging these obvious parts and then delving into the nuances. The Odyssey not as sexist or violent as it first appears, nor is Odysseus as much of an asshole as he first appears.

    • @emiquiroga8647
      @emiquiroga8647 Před 10 lety +11

      Hey John you are fucking awesome man, thanks for the crash courses

  • @BeCurieUs
    @BeCurieUs Před 10 lety +38

    Oh the burning of the Library of Alexandria, how many volumes of man have been forever lost! It still makes me sad whenever I am reminded of it

  • @sn00dles83
    @sn00dles83 Před 7 lety +516

    "I hate you, best wishes, John Green" *mind explodes*

  • @Teo117
    @Teo117 Před 2 měsíci +3

    10 years!!! And it’s still amazing

  • @s02229
    @s02229 Před 10 lety +80

    Please don't ever stop making literature videos, because we don't have English literature in high school in where I live and I want to study it so bad, even if my English is really not good

  • @SvenskaKrig1709
    @SvenskaKrig1709 Před 10 lety +19

    It is what Odyessis get for using Applemaps.

  • @thegaspatthegateway
    @thegaspatthegateway Před 6 lety +110

    I wonder if Captain Jack Sparrow was inspired by Odysseus

  • @Yal_Rathol
    @Yal_Rathol Před 8 lety +550

    "can't enjoy a book unless you know about the author".
    i disagree. ender's game is much better when you know nothing about orson scott card.

    • @zakkizer2490
      @zakkizer2490 Před 8 lety +33

      And for some great authors, like Shakespeare and Homer, finding out about them isn't an option, doesn't make them any less great

    • @aisling8344
      @aisling8344 Před 8 lety +86

      im pretty sure he was being sarcastic. he's said so many times that books belong to their readers, implying that what a reader gets out of a book is more important than the authors intentions, so i doubt john thinks that learning about the author is that important.

    • @Yal_Rathol
      @Yal_Rathol Před 7 lety +4

      Abdulkarim Elnaas enjoy that little trip, did we?

    • @keerthikonuganti5179
      @keerthikonuganti5179 Před 7 lety +6

      same with 1984 and animal farm.

    • @Lucy-ng7cw
      @Lucy-ng7cw Před 7 lety +6

      I think with Enders game it's important to keep in mind that the messages are coming from the mouth of an arsehole and not to take it too seriously. Still, an awesome series.

  • @MeagaRae
    @MeagaRae Před 10 lety +72

    For an interesting read, some people may want to check out The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood. It's a novel that was later turned into a play and tells the story of Penelope in Ithaca while Odysseus was gone. It's an interesting contemporary view of a classical text.

  • @littleducklinglove
    @littleducklinglove Před 10 lety +16

    A side note on the open letter: there's actually a theory about this among sociologists that says property was the initial reason for this double standard. In order for a man to pass down his property rights, he had to know who his child was. He couldn't do this if he couldn't guarantee he was the only person sleeping with the woman who claimed to be carrying his child. This wasn't a problem for women, because they gave birth, so they would know which children were theirs. It doesn't make things right, but it's a theory about why men needed to control women's sex lives.

  • @atouloupas
    @atouloupas Před 7 lety +355

    Nice video, but... I dont understand why you see everything with modern logic. This epos was written almost 2800 years ago. They had other morals, habits, traditions. You pay attention to all the murders, misogynism etc when there are tons of other amazing points in the story. To the people who watched the video, i recommend reading both the Iliad and Oddysey. They are both unique and amazing, theres nothing else similar to them.
    P.S. The Trojan Horse is NOT in the Iliad! Its in Aeneid, an epic poem by Virgilius.

    • @xijinping4418
      @xijinping4418 Před 7 lety +64

      He does bring up that it was in another time period, though. I think it is fair to look back on it from a modern viewpoint in a lot of respects, especially when comparing our culture of today to that of the Odyssey and Iliad.

    • @LiquidMetalLifeForm
      @LiquidMetalLifeForm Před 4 lety +5

      Then I refer you to Cyrus's bill of human rights...
      I think morality is "absolute", and not relative. Illiad and Odysseus are an encyclopedia acquired skills for a Greek as to how to live their lives based on immorality; a daily Greek routine.

    • @zliu4208
      @zliu4208 Před 4 lety +21

      I don’t think it is inherently wrong to appraise an ancient work through a modern lens. No one can be entirely objective while reading a piece a literature. Neither should that be the purpose of reading.

  • @katiefox3259
    @katiefox3259 Před rokem +7

    I’m just gonna leave my Epic the Musical comment here now… 👀

  • @madscribbles101
    @madscribbles101 Před 10 lety +22

    I don't understand why people are complaining. This is CRASHCOURSE, of course a couple of minutes is not enough to cover all the themes to discuss.
    And John is entitled to his opinion on patriarchy. All the objections to it just go to show how entrenched this idea is.

    • @Skeloperch
      @Skeloperch Před 10 lety +4

      The idea that the patriarchy exists any more is neofeminist bullshit. It was smashed a long time ago - before John was even born. The reason people are upset is because he completely blindsides the viewers with this. I watched this video not because I wanted to get false accusations of double standards thrown in my face, but because I wanted to see another person's opinion on the Odyssey.
      John is a scholar, or should be. He shouldn't be talking about a patriarchy existing /today/ if he was doing his homework instead of falling prey to yellow journalism and sensationalism. His brother did the same shit a while back, and the Internet Aristocrat (just going to plug him here, since he's a well-learned man who doesn't fall into these trappings) tore him a new one.
      I get the idea. I know that women have things they have to put up with as well, but boiling down a complex issue down to "It's the mens fault!" is like boiling down the problems with the American healthcare system to "It's not socialized!". I'm severely disappointed in John Green, but I mean no ill will with what I right. I know he's lurking these comments, and wholeheartedly wish he would take what I'm saying to mind. Don't push political agendas down our throats if you don't know both sides of the equation. It's like trying to explain how partial fraction decomposition works without teaching people how to turn it into matrices.

    • @SourBitters
      @SourBitters Před 10 lety +1

      ***** If someone is rewriting history because of crotch politics you can't help them. They think because feminism points out its usually upper class men in power that makes them the bad guys. So than they get pissed off because they're just regular dudes who have no power.
      You could tell them, "Hey in ancient times women weren't allowed to be actresses only men could preform on stage, and they'd twist it around and go, "SEE! MEN WERE DANCING AROUND FOR WOMEN'S ENTERTAINMENT WHILE WOMEN JUST SAT IN THE AUDIENCE AND DID NOTHING!!!"

    • @broudwauy
      @broudwauy Před 10 lety +1

      ***** It's hard to tread your waters because it seems pretty anecdotal. Do women REALLY have to show why she's worthy in an argument? Using rape as a topic of patriarchy is pretty shaky at best. Both men and women suffer rape (although I will say that women are the majority, for fairly obvious reasons) and feel severe emotional distress afterward. Both have unfair double standards placed on them afterward (Women: Why did you dress like that?!?! Men: What, you didn't like it bro?!?!). There are a lot of disgusting plays in a defense lawyer's handbook for all cases. It's not patriarchy.
      I reiterate my point from earlier to your second paragraph.
      I would like to say there's a HUGE difference between a patriarchal society and a sexist society. Patriarchal societies give distinct benefits to men, by men and usually actively promoted these benefits and ideas. Sexist societies are just what they are; sexist, in any sort of obvious way. We're probably the latter.
      No one mentions the sexism in any pre-19th century books, because, well, WE KNOW. We all know that sexism and especially patriarchal societies were the dominant force and we all know where this occurs within the book. It's not hard to realize that every woman Odysseus meets either wants to fuck him or is waiting to BE fucked by him. If you want to go full Anita Sarkeesian on modern media, be my guest, but there are plenty o' refutations for her. Plenty.

    • @Skeloperch
      @Skeloperch Před 10 lety

      Feminism isn't about playing fair. It's boogeyman strawman bullshit that paints males as either spineless worms or devilish demons out to keep women down.
      It is a conspiracy theory down to its heart. Modern feminism is basically the same as people who blame Obama for all of our problems. Everyone gets shafted by people with more money, but feminists complain the loudest about because their ancestors were oppressed (and even then, most women at the time didn't give a rat's ass. They knew the role they played in the survival of the species, and they knew the role that men played. Until the 1900's, there weren't any appealing jobs that women would want to fight for, so they were perfectly content with a patriarchy.)

    • @DJBremen
      @DJBremen Před 10 lety +1

      The patriarchy part is ridiculed, here as it is in general, because its a ridiculous myopic notion. Hes entitled to opinions, but not exempt from the laughter of unfounded ones.

  • @JoshTheOther
    @JoshTheOther Před 10 lety +53

    "It's a blindingly good pun"... I see what you did there... OH CRAP, I just made a pun! D:

  • @RadialEnergy
    @RadialEnergy Před 8 lety +29

    "You can tell I'm an English teacher because I'm wearing a sweater, but you can tell I'm an English teacher who wants to be your friend because I'm wearing awesome sneakers."
    It's hilarious to me because that is actually my thought process when I talk to my teachers. I'm like, "Hey, I don't know if you're just putting on that friendly face as an act for the class or - oh! You're wearing converse. You must be legit."

  • @jonathanvilario5402
    @jonathanvilario5402 Před 4 lety +29

    "It's a blindingly good pun"
    You cheeky cheeky man.

  • @fisheatsyourhead
    @fisheatsyourhead Před 10 lety +29

    "blindingly good pun"
    so good

    • @nosirragessej
      @nosirragessej Před 10 lety +20

      Even better in the original Greek.
      He gives his name as Οὖτίς, but when the cyclops yells that Οὖτίς has blinded him, the others hear "οὔτις" (the "noman" or "nobody" word) and when they respond that "If no man is attacking you, you must be ill; when Zeus makes people ill, there is no help for it, and you had better pray to your father Poseidon", the grammer is such that "οὔτις" becomes "μή τίς" which sounds a lot like μῆτις - metis, the skill or cunning that Odysseus was so well known for.
      It goes like this.
      What Polyphemus means: "This Otis guy is killing me!"
      What the other Cyclopes hear: "Nobody is killing me!"
      What the other Cyclopes say: "If nobody is killing you, suck it up."
      What Polyphemus hears: "If you've been outsmarted, suck it up."

    • @prestonscott73
      @prestonscott73 Před 10 lety

      Jesse Garrison
      Beautifully rendered. Thank you for that.

    • @nosirragessej
      @nosirragessej Před 10 lety +1

      prestonscott73
      It's literally my favorite pun of all time, but until I read the endnotes of the Robert Fagles translation I was unaware of it.

    • @prestonscott73
      @prestonscott73 Před 10 lety +1

      Jesse Garrison
      Aha, I still need to read the Fagles translation, my old Ancient Greek professor Peter Green (no relation to John) raves about it. I still have the Lattimore edition.

  • @alannar.5520
    @alannar.5520 Před 10 lety +18

    You did it again, John. Made a video about just what I needed the day before the test I had it on.

  • @julianebuchner1795
    @julianebuchner1795 Před 4 lety +53

    For people who want to read the whole thing themselves, I cannot recommend Emily Wilson's translation enough! It is very true to the text in that it is an epic poem with a consistent rhythm and the same number of lines as the original, and takes a fresh look at the actual meaning of the original words as opposed to layers of clichees that have accumulated through centuries of translations. It's very modern in that it uses everyday English that we can understand, just like the original used contemporary Greek that was easy enough to be passed on orally. It really captures the variety of styles and moods and characters so well! My favorite part of it might be Telemachus to the suitors: “Stop eating all my food!“ [breaks down crying], just because it shows so well how he is really a scared and angry teenager, nervous about speaking up in public and anxious to defend some notion of honor that his father never got to explain because he wasn't around. I found the idea of reading the entire Odyssee daunting, but this translation made it easy, enjoyable and very rewarding. And it includes an introduction and excellent translator's note as well.

  • @tophatthehat
    @tophatthehat Před 8 lety +163

    our class is currently reading the graphic novel version, and me and this other kid are keeping a piece of paper counting how many people Odysseus has killed

    • @marijahoel9913
      @marijahoel9913 Před 8 lety +3

      And did you find out

    • @tophatthehat
      @tophatthehat Před 8 lety +22

      no, there was so many we lost count, lets just say a lot.

    • @ichiban1336
      @ichiban1336 Před 7 lety +16

      Hundreds if you just count the handmaidens and suitors

    • @Lonestar512
      @Lonestar512 Před 7 lety +6

      If it's Not exactly like the "Original" then it's meaningless to do that.... They are probably added deaths invented specifically for the graphic novel "version"!! That's fine and all for entertainment but just don't forget there is a Real version from Ancient Times!!!

    • @outis439-A
      @outis439-A Před 4 lety +1

      @David Belcher Which translation do you prefer?

  • @ConspiracyRisk
    @ConspiracyRisk Před 10 lety +8

    I've only seen CC World History and two Literature 1 episodes until now, and I can notice a _huge_ difference in his talking speed.

  • @TawnyPixie
    @TawnyPixie Před 10 lety +11

    Best Open Letter ever!! Preach it, John!

  • @derekgornall
    @derekgornall Před 7 lety +25

    I always loved the Odyssey; both in High School English and the movie. To me it was one of the ultimate journey epics. Like LotR, it's just a very very long journey with a penultimate goal of returning home, but with fun little adventures and trials along the way.

  • @alannar.8701
    @alannar.8701 Před 8 lety +902

    I totally disagree with the idea of the Odyssey being sexist (for its time. Don't get me wrong, if it was written today I would consider it to be a misogynistic horror). It's not saying that women should be feared: it's saying that women have power. And that's pretty remarkable for the time of its creation.
    Sure, a lot of villains are female, but so are a lot of heroes. A lot of the people who are smart, cunning, and powerful (that is to say, like Odysseus) are female. Athena, for crying out loud (who obviously was already created, but her inclusion in the story speaks for itself)! And the women in the story know it. The double standard doesn't go unnoticed by women; Calypso thinks it's completely unfair. No doubt, the double standard existed in Greek society as it still exists today, but if Homer had agreed with it, he wouldn't allow women to fight against it.
    And Odysseus' attitude towards women isn't half bad (again, for his time). When Calypso is forced to release him, she asks why he doesn't want to stay. After all, she's much prettier than Penelope. Odysseus replies that he doesn't care about how pretty she is, Penelope in his wife, and he loves her immensely. He's saying that a woman's value doesn't come from her sex appeal.
    I'm reading The Odyssey for school, and I was honestly shocked at how much the author respects women, and how he shows that women have the ability to be as great as Odysseus, and I was equally shocked when I saw how much you disagreed,

    • @jackklein113
      @jackklein113 Před 8 lety +27

      +Alanna R. i think you should reread it

    • @jlwebster9
      @jlwebster9 Před 8 lety +84

      +Alanna R. I always felt the same way. My teacher went off about him being with Calypso for years while Penelope fended off suitors, but I considered that he was forcibly held on her island and frequently raped. Yeah, some of the attitudes on gender are extremely dated, but that's to be expected on a work thousands of years old. I feel the work is actually a bit empowering of women for its time. Penelope shows her own cunning ability similar to Odysseus in that she weaves and unweaves a cloth for 20 years to keep the suitors at bay, and of course there is Athena. I always thought the love between Odysseus and Penelope was genuine.

    • @jackklein113
      @jackklein113 Před 8 lety +31

      There is a huge double standard of men being sexist towards women, specifically displayed in Agamemnon's warning to Odysseus. Agamemnon had a mistress, yet he despised his wife for not being loyal to him. Also, Kalypso doesn't care about power, but having a relationship with a mortal(Hermes' scolding Kalypso). Arete--the queen of Phaiakia, not the greek theme--is a great example of women having more power then men.

    • @alannar.8701
      @alannar.8701 Před 8 lety +8

      ***** No, John has a point. I just disagree.

    • @devilsshield
      @devilsshield Před 7 lety +18

      There was sexism on many places and I don't mind discussing that. I have a problem with "Patriarchy theory" that he uses which has so vague of a description, so useless as an idea that it makes an enemy from my bunny pet.

  • @1608svetlana
    @1608svetlana Před 10 lety +17

    I actually stidy the Odyssey in school, so I was super happy when I saw that it was the first subject in the new crash course literature.
    You can also see the Odyssey as a story about moderation. The suitors were extreme when they pushed their hosts hospitality (bound by the rules of Xenia - Hospitality) but Telemachus was the opposite, refusing a gift from Nestor. Odysseus was very unfaithful while was his wife was etc.
    I'm glad to see a classic like this being discussed, especially since I'm informed enough to join in ;)

  • @brontesaurusrex7235
    @brontesaurusrex7235 Před 10 lety +16

    "I HATE YOU. ... Best wishes."
    May or may not have giggled a lot.

    • @syamilatsarisujud336
      @syamilatsarisujud336 Před 10 lety

      Never pray for ill will to your enemies.

    • @SunyiSideUp
      @SunyiSideUp Před 10 lety

      Syamil Atsari Sujud There was no prayer. SO.... what are you talking about?

  • @marieflynn9420
    @marieflynn9420 Před 8 lety +86

    9:00
    Actually, he would have worn a chiton, which is like a toga, but different. Togas were worn by the Romans, not the Greeks.

  • @davidharris1194
    @davidharris1194 Před 7 lety +133

    Odysseus was a man of his time. Polygamy and/or concubinage was accepted then. Remember that Abraham, Jacob, David and Solomon had multiple wives. Even Ramses II had more than 100 wives and mistresses. It was more of a man's world then than now.
    As for the slaughter of the suitors, remember that they ate his food, drank his wine, and trashed his house. They also plotted to kill Telemachus in a sea ambush on his return journey.
    What was he supposed to do? Say: "I'm back. You can go home now"? If they would plot to kill his son they would have had no problem killing him where he stood.
    The families of the suitors were egged on and led by Eupiethes, the father of the suitor Antinous. He allowed his son to make those depredations in Odysseus' palace and apparently forgot that many years before Odysseus protected him from vengeful victims of a piratical raid he committed on a neighboring island under Odysseus' rule. He is killed by Laertes, Odysseus' father.

    • @liquidluck711
      @liquidluck711 Před 6 lety +9

      this. Way more to the story than Crash Course for some reason biased about. Wish this had more upvotes

    • @jovemokuryu3048
      @jovemokuryu3048 Před 5 lety +3

      This is moreso a nitpick than it is an actual analysis. I love the guy, but this is just upsetting

    • @alayhaferron1972
      @alayhaferron1972 Před 4 lety +2

      David Harris no true. A lot of places in the ancient world allowed freedom for women. Athens Greece had bad views towards women. Spartina, Egypt ( most ancient Africa really) even Rome etc gave women a lot of rights.

  • @ZoggFromBetelgeuse
    @ZoggFromBetelgeuse Před 10 lety +59

    Book tip : Inge Merkel, _Odysseus and Penelope: An Ordinary Marriage_. Tells the story from Penelope's point of view.

    • @emmahedges552
      @emmahedges552 Před 10 lety +2

      Margaret Atwood's Penelopiad does as well

    • @apedro200
      @apedro200 Před 10 lety +1

      will you make new videos soon

  • @cj-seejay-cj-seejay
    @cj-seejay-cj-seejay Před 10 lety +20

    50% of the comments on this video are telling me the patriarchy is over and the other 50% of the comments are telling me I'm some kind of busted door lock because I enjoy the completely natural biological function of sex, while men who enjoy sex get to strut around stroking their magical master keys or whatever. When really, 100% of people should be holding hands and weeping about Odysseus's dog waiting faithfully for 20+ years and dying when he sees his master has returned. omg I love heartbreaking dog stories more than I love the natural biological function of sex which is really saying something. Remember that part in Homeward Bound where you think the golden retriever died but then he finally appears limping home to greet the oldest kid in the family????? tears.

  • @robbtopolski8153
    @robbtopolski8153 Před 5 lety +8

    Just a retiring IT guy chasing a reference on a news/politics program, thanks for catching me up. Skillfully explained! Host and the team are great!

  • @truongcahanh8915
    @truongcahanh8915 Před 9 lety +241

    I like CrashCourse but you're simplifying the Odyssey way too much in this video.

    • @Scheater5
      @Scheater5 Před 9 lety +78

      The Lovely Warrior So, trying not to sound crass or flamebait here....but the title of the series is "Crash Course." so...yea, it's oversimplified. Think of it as an intro, "cliff notes," or jumping off point for further discussion and study.

    • @sorzin2289
      @sorzin2289 Před 6 lety +15

      It's a long story

    • @zeon_cipher5799
      @zeon_cipher5799 Před 4 lety +10

      do u not know the meaning of crash course.

    • @StrahdVonZarovich802
      @StrahdVonZarovich802 Před 4 lety +22

      Crash course is simplifying not pushing your feminist propaganda in an ancient work to get gender politics points.

  • @cj-seejay-cj-seejay
    @cj-seejay-cj-seejay Před 10 lety +11

    you may critique his reading of the odyssey, but one thing john green definitely got right was that sweater.

  • @poeticnerd1990
    @poeticnerd1990 Před 10 lety +20

    After this, you should do Crash Course; Shakespeare. Each episode dedicated to each of his 36 plays!

    • @willyhassertt
      @willyhassertt Před 10 lety +1

      Oh god, Titus Andronicus would be awkward.

  • @RedRobertify
    @RedRobertify Před 8 lety +54

    Being warned about being killed by your wife isn't misogyny in this case it's prudence

    • @xtxpxhx
      @xtxpxhx Před 4 lety +5

      I'm sorry but Agamemnon got it coming!

  • @Galistarwater
    @Galistarwater Před 6 lety +5

    The Illiad and the Odyssey are some of my favorites classical literature, and some of my favorite mythologies. Thanks for doing a video on this.

  • @akaKakashiFanatic
    @akaKakashiFanatic Před 10 lety +12

    I never really understood much of the Odyssey until today. It makes a lot more sense now. Thank you, John! :D

  • @ChocolateTeapot93
    @ChocolateTeapot93 Před 10 lety +21

    What I took from this video: Things were never boring in ancient Greece and Troy is a surprisingly accurate film (compared to what I would have expected).
    What I took from the comments: A lot of men here think that women use sex to manipulate men, by withholding sex. Everyone who used the lock and key analogy in the comments was a man even though allegedly (stated by men) women are more likely to judge other women for sleeping around. So basically some men want women to jump into bed with them straight away but they want them to not do that for other men. OR you could just respect the fact that we have free will and its not all about you.

    • @ythehunter755
      @ythehunter755 Před 10 lety

      At my school they even use it in Greek and history class

  • @OnThatReallx3
    @OnThatReallx3 Před 8 lety +4

    last day of finals tomorrow, your videos have helped me so much throughout this school year, not even just English but with hon biology & AP history too. Thank you!

  • @SophieHatterLeFay
    @SophieHatterLeFay Před 5 lety +7

    John's wardrobe is on point today, the dark forest green looks good on him

  • @DontMockMySmock
    @DontMockMySmock Před 10 lety +14

    I just want to say that I wholeheartedly approve of this episode's "Open Letter."

    • @Samakain
      @Samakain Před 10 lety +2

      oh no! someone mentioned a term that was generated by the feminisims! my limited understanding of it makes me believe it isn't a thing! Quick! flee before they steal all our testicles!

    • @WindexmanIII
      @WindexmanIII Před 10 lety

      Samakain shhhh

  • @BramowitchIII
    @BramowitchIII Před 10 lety +5

    Socrates said it himself beautifully what a hero really is :"A man not pre-eminently virtuous and just, whose misfortune, however, is brought upon him not by vice and depravity but by some error of judgement,

  • @dtinagliastudios
    @dtinagliastudios Před 8 lety +11

    7:32 because a key that unlocks many locks is a magical key, but a lock that is opened by many keys is a bad lock

    • @ReydeCP1122
      @ReydeCP1122 Před 8 lety +8

      +DTinaglia Studios That.... is not a logical argument.... at all.

    • @theflourishcrisis
      @theflourishcrisis Před 8 lety +2

      +DTinaglia Studios good comparison

    • @Legomyegoorj
      @Legomyegoorj Před 8 lety +7

      +DTinaglia Studios Yeah, let's boil down an entire human being with complex emotions and traits to a simple object like a lock or a key. Awesome.
      Maybe if we valued people and used things, rather than use people and value things, the world would be a *wee bit better*.

    • @dtinagliastudios
      @dtinagliastudios Před 8 lety +3

      Legomyegoorj is metaphor, please be calm.

    • @Topicaltropicalpopsicle
      @Topicaltropicalpopsicle Před 8 lety +2

      +DTinaglia Studios So you’re saying men about two inches long and often found in the hands of authority figures?

  • @ht491
    @ht491 Před 4 lety +40

    This whole video isn’t a summary of the odyssey, it’s just about the “double standards” of a story from 3000 years ago

  • @TheLoyalOfficer
    @TheLoyalOfficer Před 10 lety +19

    Patriarchy? Are you kidding me?

    • @TheLoyalOfficer
      @TheLoyalOfficer Před 10 lety +7

      ***** Well said! LOL!
      I have to deal with this nonsense on a regular basis where I work. It's really sickening.
      Once I am done with what I need to do, I am going to dedicate my life to smashing this cultural Marxism.

  • @BlinkPopShift
    @BlinkPopShift Před 10 lety +14

    Like John mentioned The Odyssey wasn't written but instead composed and sung before the aid of the alphabet. In fact those texts that were shown in the video are likely the original transcriptions of the poems which were done sometime in the sixth or seventh century BCE. This idea, that the greeks could compose literature without the written word was a controversial one when first proposed by Milman Parry, a structural linguist, in the 1930's. Parry studied the the meter and repetitive, redundant language proving that the structure of the poem was first and foremost an aid to memory the purpose of which was to ferry the strongest memes of culture across generations. (Ironically we would have lost the poem and the culture there in if it hadn't been written down... yay information technology!)

    • @singharkirat
      @singharkirat Před 10 lety

      we still have these singsong as ballads in many cultures/religions/traditions and sometimes we do write them down later because music was composed orally in ancient times. hence the oral tradition

    • @ihathtelekinesis
      @ihathtelekinesis Před 10 lety +2

      I'd also like to add to all the fantastic things you say that Homeric Greek isn't just about stock epithets and formulae that are easy to remember, it's also a mix of loads of different Greek dialects from different points in history: there are Doric, Ionic and Aeolic words all side by side, and probably *because* they're formulaic and fit in with the metre. And not long after Parry's thesis came out, he went with Albert Lord to what was Yugoslavia to find out about oral poets there (like Hakirat mentions) and how similar they were to Homer.
      (Also, I'm not sure all those texts were original transcripts: they're probably mediaeval manuscripts because they've got lowercase letters and accents which hadn't been invented back when the Homeric epics were first written down.)

  • @honestlyidk4779
    @honestlyidk4779 Před 7 lety +1

    Crash Course is so helpful, we're learning about Greek Mythology and the Trojan War at school and this has taught me so much in less than 15 minutes

  • @chefkendranguyen
    @chefkendranguyen Před 10 lety +13

    I stopped paying attention when they started feasting on the goat cheese..lol Good episode, John.

    • @cj-seejay-cj-seejay
      @cj-seejay-cj-seejay Před 10 lety +6

      omg i would murder like 20 suitors for a slice of chevre pizza right now

    • @cj-seejay-cj-seejay
      @cj-seejay-cj-seejay Před 10 lety +3

      slut4berniesanders with caramelized onions obviously

    • @ephraimduke
      @ephraimduke Před 10 lety +7

      Nonamearisto Why did you put the word patriarchy in quotes ? Are you denying that ancient Greek society was male dominated ? Because that would be idiotic. Than again you probably think Reagan was a good president.

    • @Spikeupine
      @Spikeupine Před 10 lety

      reached that part just as i read your comment

  • @MaskofPoesy
    @MaskofPoesy Před 10 lety +4

    Crashcourse is probably the most awesome, helpful thing Green brothers participated in, just brilliant.

  • @saralarner6507
    @saralarner6507 Před 9 lety +29

    And the sexual double standard does exist, but not in the way you describe it! In ancient greek society, sex is a political act, especially for women. Odysseus wouldn't be killing Penelope for sleeping around, just as he isn't killing the handmaidens for sleeping around. He's killing the handmaidens for sleeping with *the suitors,* who were his major political rivals. Those handmaidens also spied on his wife, and did other political sabotage.
    And as mentioned in my other comment, the poem does not sanction Odysseus sleeping around. It expressly condemns it. And he does *not* "almost marry" Nausica! He rejects her with fantastic diplomacy, and inverts the expectation of the bucolic maiden/stranger scene.
    That said, I love crashcourse. You just got this one really, really wrong.

    • @marknahas2484
      @marknahas2484 Před 9 lety +1

      hey sara :), can you please tell me the other double-standard that he mentions apart from the sexual one? please, i have an exam tomorrow.

    • @saralarner6507
      @saralarner6507 Před 9 lety +3

      Mark Nahas Do you mean Homer or John? Because Homer goes into all sorts of double standards about sex, as seen in Agamemnon's speech to Odysseus, when he raves against his wife and hardly mentions the fact that it was his brother she was sleeping with, and (in most older greek depictions, not Aeschylus, which was later) it is his brother that actually kills him. The fact that he only cares about his wife's sexual infidelity, and not his brother's familial betrayal, is very telling. Because for women in the classical Greek world sex cannot be extracted from politics. Penelope could not sleep with the suitors without giving them her favor, yet Odysseus can sleep with Cerce without owing her any loyalty (this is echoed in Virgil's Aeneid in Book IV, when Aeneas can leave Dido and she suffers utter political defeat whereas he is politically unaffected).
      I don't think John mentions that, but I don't really want to rewatch the video to check because time, and also it was fairly frustrating.
      If you're asking about non-sexual double standards, you can see the double standard between generations - it is all well and good for Telemakus to try to emulate his Dad, but the instant he tries to string that bow Odysseus stops him. Because that would be a challenge. Yet Odysseus completely subordinated his own father, who didn't even get to name him. There's also the double standard between kings and their subjects: it is absolutely okay for Odysseus to let all of his men die: they disobeyed him, and he is clearly their superior. But when he disobeys the gods (who are clearly his superiors) they still can't just let him die, because he's Odysseus, and just more important. (Note also that Ithaca is one of the smallest kingdoms to throw in its weight on the side of the Greeks in the Trojan war. They brought something like 10 ships, while almost all the other captains brought between fifty and a hundred. Yet he's still a lord, and more important. What I'm saying is, it's to do with birth, not wealth.)
      I'm sure there are a bunch more I'm missing, but I don't want to have to put actual effort into this (because I'm lazy and you probably don't want more than that and I have deadlines I should be worrying about), so I'm gonna stop now. If you have any other questions feel free to ask though. I kind of love talking about the Odyssey.

    • @saralarner6507
      @saralarner6507 Před 9 lety +2

      Mark Nahas Actually in all fairness Cerce is a nymph/witch, so Odysseus' loyalty doesn't matter to her at all, and I have no idea what context would allow Odysseus to give it to her. Better example would be Calypso, since she explicitly asks him to stay and he says no. She then rants about how all the male gods get to keep their female sex slaves, but as soon as any of the female gods find a mortal they like they have to let him go. So that double standard exists more among the gods, implying that it exists more in general Greek society than in the idealized mortal world of Homer.
      In fact, Odysseus can't have sex with Nausicaa because if he did that would be giving political allegiance to her father and her land.
      So I suppose what I'm saying is, yes, the sexual double-standard of political loyalty exists, but much more heavily among the gods than the mortals - and I would go on to argue that that is Homer's critique of the general attitudes of Greek society (which were typified in the Iliad, which, as mentioned, the Odyssey is unwriting).

  • @CinnamonToast
    @CinnamonToast Před 9 lety +12

    "A blindingly good pun"
    For the love of god, John 😂

  • @VideoNozoki
    @VideoNozoki Před 10 lety +14

    I was hoping to hear more about the actual story (in depth, maybe divided into 2 videos).
    I was really hoping to learn 'Literature.' (12 min. and John almost doesn't mention Telemachus, who is the center of this part of the story, forced to grow from a boy to a man, wanting to know if his father Homer is still alive or dead, etc.)
    In Gatsby, John talks about the use of yellow and its meaning, the green light across the water, the glasses representing the ever-watching (albeit aloof) eyes of God. I hope the other Crash Course Literature videos cover more of these type of topics... (>_

    • @TheGabe92
      @TheGabe92 Před 10 lety +18

      I agree. While discussing misogyny in an obviously misogynist work is important, John leaves other important themes like the search for identity, the concept of home or the difficulty of reestablishing and reinventing old relations untouched. I vote for a second part!

    • @zerosysko
      @zerosysko Před 10 lety +2

      Perhaps even a couple minutes more and he could have touched on some of the other themes.

  • @TheSgtkite
    @TheSgtkite Před 10 lety +9

    Great to have this back! John doesn't really seem as excited about it as he was about history though. I loved the bit on cycles of violence. People need to calm down that he mentioned the patriarchy. Solid video.

  • @aisling8344
    @aisling8344 Před 8 lety

    as someone who finds it hard to follow along with what people are saying sometimes, i really appreciate the accurate closed captions on these videos.

  • @ellielane4780
    @ellielane4780 Před 6 lety +6

    “I’d be an astonishingly handsome 17 year old” 😂😂😂I love him and his books

  • @UrsulaDaSeaWishh
    @UrsulaDaSeaWishh Před 10 lety +59

    As a classics major and a feminist, I officially proclaim this video the best thing ever.

    • @kingdavid6729
      @kingdavid6729 Před 10 lety +25

      So, got your resume all ready for submission to the local Starbucks once you finish?

    • @UrsulaDaSeaWishh
      @UrsulaDaSeaWishh Před 10 lety +23

      Fuck off, I want to go for my PhD and be a professor, and I'm an art history minor so my back-up plan is to work in a museum. Furthermore, there are a multitude of career options for classics majors-a lot of classics majors go into law or medicine because the terminology is all derived from Latin and Greek, a lot of rather famous authors were classics majors (J. K. Rowling, Tolkien, etc) had backgrounds in classics, and what the fuck do you think archaeologists major in? Do your research before you talk shit.

    • @UrsulaDaSeaWishh
      @UrsulaDaSeaWishh Před 10 lety +4

      Amaan Mithani Yeah I know, it just gets real old real fast, having people tell you that your major is useless.

    • @OwlAndPhoenix
      @OwlAndPhoenix Před 10 lety +4

      Ezi Zee Don't worry, classics makes you a good person and prepares you for life and death. #classicsmajorwins

    • @UrsulaDaSeaWishh
      @UrsulaDaSeaWishh Před 10 lety +5

      ***** I'm not a feminism major, you dingus. I'm a CLASSICS major. I study the ancient world. (I'm not even going to touch your patriarchy comment.)

  • @YogawithJib
    @YogawithJib Před 10 lety +16

    just wanna tell you how much i LOVE all your crash course videos, esp literature ones!

  • @noemistephanie93
    @noemistephanie93 Před 9 lety

    the fact that the author of one of my fave books and movie of this year is doing this video, makes learning about a difficult school book much better :D

  • @Vidar1312
    @Vidar1312 Před 4 lety +11

    "A octopus with teeth"
    So a octopus? You do realize they have teeth right?

    • @GiladZinman
      @GiladZinman Před 4 lety +6

      Vidar 1312 I believe they have a beak, or like 1 singular tooth.

  • @Arkantos117
    @Arkantos117 Před 10 lety +30

    When it comes to sleeping around, you have to think about heirs.
    If a man sleeps around you can be pretty sure that the one who gives birth isn't his actual wife, therefore no inheritance issues.
    If a woman sleeps around, well, how are you to know it's actually the man's child & heir? You could be handing your kingdom over to the son of another ruler or something.
    Who'd want to marry their son into a kingdom where he can't be sure if his kids are his own? It'd be a diplomatic annoyance to say the least, could ruin all sorts of alliances in a time when things often revolved around personal relationship between rulers.
    As for why it happens with the common folk, well, people usually try to emulate their social superiors, hence fashions and what not.
    Also, I don't really agree with this as a criticism of Oddyseus at all, he was sort of forced into those situations.

    • @maxmarkel1794
      @maxmarkel1794 Před 10 lety

      good point

    • @helloquat
      @helloquat Před 10 lety

      That's really a quite interesting viewpoint on why society has this double standard.

    • @Arkantos117
      @Arkantos117 Před 10 lety +2

      If you look at cultures where their beliefs about conception are incorrect or where they have different attitudes to inheritance/fatherhood, such as the Trobriands, you often find that the women are a lot more sexually free than people in other parts of the world used to be.
      I think that they believed that the child was developed through repeated sex between two individuals, so as long as the husband is sleeping with is wife the most, its k.
      (this is old knowledge so it may be a bit dusty in areas)
      There was one culture, though I can't remember the name, where they believed that the child's father was determined by the dreams of the one the wife loves. Therefore she can have sex as much as she wants, as only her husbands dreams can create the child.
      So really, I think that the traditional double standard has a lot to do with inheritance laws.

    • @MrStickyIggy
      @MrStickyIggy Před 10 lety

      also that women are the gatekeepers of sex.
      women can have sex at anytime they want, men have to work for it.

    • @stevemanart
      @stevemanart Před 10 lety +5

      Context as to why that mindset developed does not forgive the fact that today, where it is no longer an issue to worry about, it still persists and is a driving force in the subjugation of women the world around.
      John's Open Letter wasn't so much a damnation of Odysseus. Look again at the opening line "Open Letter to the Patriarchy, How are you so resilient?" He used this story that is drenched in ancient mindsets to call attention to flaws in the today's world - which is, to me. one of the more nobler aspects of literary analysis.

  • @Waltham1892
    @Waltham1892 Před 10 lety +12

    "The only of the poems to survive the burning of the Library at Alexandria"
    Thanks a lot Christians!

    • @RhinoOfSteel
      @RhinoOfSteel Před 10 lety +12

      Actually the library was burned several times by native Egyptians, rival Greek/Macedonians, Romans, Christians, and Muslims if one believes all the stories. The poor building was not treated well.

    • @seanduff8878
      @seanduff8878 Před 10 lety

      RhinoOfSteel Yeah, by the time Christians arrived on the scene the Library had been gone for about a hundred years.

    • @Waltham1892
      @Waltham1892 Před 10 lety +1

      Sean Duff If the library had been gone for 100 years, what was the purpose of Pope Theophilus' decree in 391 AD?

    • @TimothyFerguson
      @TimothyFerguson Před 10 lety +2

      Waltham1892 He made several, but the one I think you are referring to closed the Serapium. It was a focus of pagan worship which is what interested him, but it was also the largest of the surviving daughter collection of the Library of Alexandria.
      Some, who define the library as the collection, see one as a continuation of the other, and so the loss of the smaller is the technical end of the greater.

    • @Waltham1892
      @Waltham1892 Před 10 lety

      Wow, you actually knew that. Or at least you bothered to look it up.
      Rare, and impressive.

  • @raffeyosmani1493
    @raffeyosmani1493 Před 4 lety +2

    I watch crash course at night to help me sleep. Information overload.

  • @onceuponablink7666
    @onceuponablink7666 Před 6 lety +9

    Welcome to my life where I’m doing my homework at my grandparent’s house on Sunday

  • @Snoopod
    @Snoopod Před 10 lety +5

    Wow that was REALLY good, John. Looking forward to this course.

  • @gaugebosons
    @gaugebosons Před 10 lety +5

    I already loved you, John, but your comments on misogyny have turned my love up to eLEVEN! So excited for this series.

  • @ljsd1
    @ljsd1 Před 5 lety +6

    "Achilles didn't get to go home" - I'm not sure this is quite right. Achilles had every opportunity to go home, and that's exactly what he planned to do, as he told the embassy in book 9. He spoke of exactly that choice, of dying in battle and achieving κλέος or going home and living a long life, and he chose the latter. So, yes, he did go for glory in the end, but I don't think it's as straightforward as Achilles in the Iliad being all about κλέος, as he outright rejects going back into battle, at least until Patroclus is killed by Hector.

  • @cardonbluh2313
    @cardonbluh2313 Před rokem +1

    Who knew that I’d still be watching these for school in college.

  • @SunyiSideUp
    @SunyiSideUp Před 10 lety +19

    Holy fuck, the entire video is about The Odyssey, John talks about the Odyssey the whole time, and yet one mention of the word "Patriarchy" and the MRA crowd spams the comments so that they can pretend real people agree with them. ._.

    • @WerewolfEnjoyer
      @WerewolfEnjoyer Před 10 lety +5

      Yeah, it's pretty bad. Especially this ridiculous "lock and key" analogy that keeps getting farted out.

    • @kittenpyjamas
      @kittenpyjamas Před 10 lety +1

      Correctrix Except it is relevant, because generally that kind of thing is relevant to the whole of literature.

    • @kittenpyjamas
      @kittenpyjamas Před 10 lety +1

      I'm glad someone is talking sense. Everyone else seems to have got some ridiculous MRA hat on.

    • @bluexroses414
      @bluexroses414 Před 10 lety +3

      Correctrix It's not off topic. The Odyssey itself is practically obsessed with sex and who's sleeping or has slept with who. The women Odysseus sleeps with are in some way supernatural, and even the most dangerous monsters are feminized and sexualized, particularly the Sirens who's power is literally to seduce men with their "irresistible" songs. When Odysseus cheats on his wife, he gets a pass because the women were exceptional/powerful.
      The book spends whole chapters on Penelope's life at home. The story invites us to like Penelope BECAUSE she is faithful to her husband, even after TWENTY YEARS of him being gone. Odysseus worries about her fidelity, and he's motivated to get home to her and their "special" marriage bed. Penelope has had to play hostess for a horde of men looking to "claim" her now that Odysseus is (supposedly) dead. And they refuse to leave, sitting in her house drinking and eating her food, no matter how much she refuses their proposals. Her husband is the only one who can finally get rid of them.
      All of these notions come from a patriarchal ideology, and the central conflicts of the story are direct results of the patriarchal society depicted. Seeing as how we in 2014 can recognize and empathize with these issues and motivations, I think John's tangent, at the very least, reminds us that The Odyssey is not antiquated or irrelevant, but also that we should make sure we continue to question our own society when it starts to look a little too much like this ancient patriarchal one.

  • @hillaryallan5426
    @hillaryallan5426 Před 10 lety +7

    Tonight, I hang my head in shame after reading the comments below. John, you might need to address the open letter separately, as it seems very few seem to understand it.

  • @sea_triscuit7980
    @sea_triscuit7980 Před 5 lety

    I love how at the end of the Show Troy: Fall of a City, the mother of the child he was ordered to dispose of basically curses him, which kind of foreshadows the Odyssey

  • @astro7446
    @astro7446 Před 9 lety +15

    Aw man, i though this "class" was about 2001: A space oddisey.

  • @TobyKidMajor
    @TobyKidMajor Před 10 lety +12

    New Nerdfighter expression of love: I will be true to you in my toga.

    • @Beckyg1016
      @Beckyg1016 Před 10 lety +1

      I love this!

    • @TobyKidMajor
      @TobyKidMajor Před 10 lety +2

      "Honey, I want you to know ... when I go away for the business trip, I'll be true to you in my toga."

  • @lenrat117
    @lenrat117 Před 10 lety +6

    Just finished reading the odyssey in classics a few days ago.

  • @beyzagokterim8476
    @beyzagokterim8476 Před 8 lety

    Oh my god John Green,you just perfectly talked about The epic poem,Odyssey. Thanks for everything,it helped me a lot.

  • @azipoor3468
    @azipoor3468 Před 4 lety +1

    John Green and Mike Rugnetta have made crashcourse channel mythically awesome and epic

  • @motivation4all997
    @motivation4all997 Před 10 lety +3

    Inlove this show im so glad it's back! Congrats on your great channel

  • @MoonShoesPatty
    @MoonShoesPatty Před 10 lety +9

    That's one hecka slick intro! :D

  • @tuele4302
    @tuele4302 Před 7 lety +2

    4:34 It appears you underestimate the value of special operations in general and night raids in particular. Unless you really want to lose, you do not want to get into a fair fight. You want to have as many advantages over the enemy as possible.

  • @wlapostepay
    @wlapostepay Před 8 lety

    Love your work, this series is really funny and extremely cleaver!

  • @danielmccurdy862
    @danielmccurdy862 Před 10 lety +4

    No mention of Telemachus? I mean, nearly a third of the story revolves around him and his mother while they're waiting for Odysseus to make it home. Seems like that would be important. And certain to show up on a test about the Odyssey, so you may want to look that up.

  • @Boboclock367
    @Boboclock367 Před 10 lety +19

    I greatly appreciated the lesson. Most importantly to me, you seemed to make the point that even a story as old as the Odyssey has bearing on today, that there is value in every story regardless of its age or origin. The only thing I would have liked to see more of was how feminine heroes play into the patriarchy. The fidelity of Penelope was one which you touched on but I'm interested in what values you seen in someone like Athena and what bearing they have on Greek women. Thanks for great CZcams content!

  • @what_memes_are_these9824
    @what_memes_are_these9824 Před 6 lety +1

    We were reading the graphic novel version of the Odyssey in english class and I freaking loved it!

  • @Eudaletism
    @Eudaletism Před 8 lety +19

    TIL the Iliad and the Odyssey are 2 parts of the 8-part Epic Cycle. The other parts only survive in fragments.
    Think about that. It's like reading the first two harry potter books, then stopping. What could have been...

    • @CameronK665
      @CameronK665 Před 8 lety +5

      +Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨Ʒ That's true, the Illiad was poem 2 and the Odyssey was poem 11 of the cycle. Only the Illiad and the Odyssey were written by Homer, but all other poems of the epic cycle were much shorter (2-5 books) and have been lost.

    • @DrTryloByte
      @DrTryloByte Před 8 lety +2

      Wow I didnt know that, thanks.

  • @ZoggFromBetelgeuse
    @ZoggFromBetelgeuse Před 10 lety +27

    Being a cyclops for myself - albeit the little green kind - I can't say I'm a big fan of this Odysseus.

  • @NixodCreations
    @NixodCreations Před 10 lety +7

    I have to say, when I first read the Odyssey, the Deus Ex Machina ending really pissed me off.

    • @NixodCreations
      @NixodCreations Před 10 lety

      I guess it might be because bards typically only told the exciting bits in the middle, and never actually completed the story.

    • @CarpeMetus
      @CarpeMetus Před 10 lety

      Dues ex in old stories alwayse makes me smirk. It's comforting to see it sometimes, like watching an old movie, and knowing the lines by heart. It has it's place, though it is trite. I am curious as to your claim that bards only told the middle bits of stories though.

    • @NixodCreations
      @NixodCreations Před 10 lety

      CarpeMetus Well, if they were traveling around between groups of people, it would give them the best impression of you if you told them the best bits of the story. Also, it's more likely that if you were to start at the beginning that by the time you or they had to leave you wouldn't of got to the end, so it has less detail.

  • @rafcins
    @rafcins Před 8 lety +5

    +CrashCourse I saw what you did, in the crowd when Homer tells the story, you see "The Simpsons Homer" Nice.

  • @paradisecove9714
    @paradisecove9714 Před 8 lety +3

    hey John Green! I love your books! you should keep writing.

  • @sjheiss
    @sjheiss Před 10 lety +7

    It would be amazing if Thought Cafe did a full length movie on The Odyssey. I love their animations and style!