Courses Taught
INTELLECTUAL HERITAGE (at Temple
University)
Course Info:
Sample Syllabus
Calendar
Course
Themes
Delphi- A Focal Point for IH 51 Texts
Writing Guides:
Writing Guidelines
style guide
Writing Analogies
Subject Study Aids:
Aeschylus' Agamemnon
Study Guide
Aeschylus' Libation Bearers
Study Guide
Aeschylus' Eumenides
Passages
Sophocles'
Oedipus and the Sphinx Lecture
Dr.
J's Illustrated Pericles' Funeral Oration
Dr.
J's Illustrated Pericles and America
Dr.
J's Illustrated Pericles and Philadelphia
Dr.
J's Illustrated Aeschylus' Oresteia
Dr.
J's Curse of the House of Atreus Outline
Dr. J's
Background Lecture on Greek Philosophy
Dr.
J's Apology Study Questions
Dr.
J's Illustrated Plato's Apology
Socrates
and the Apology Lecture
Dr. J's Plutarch's Pericles
Judaism
Study Guide
Sundiata Study Guide
Epic Qualities of the Sundiata
Lecture
Othello
Study Guide
Machiavelli
Study Guide
Galileo
and Humanism Lecture
RELIGIOUS
FOUNDATIONS OF CLASSICAL GREECE
ENGLISH
40
Courses Proposed
(needs some pruning):
Topics
in Classical Culture:
The Legend of the House of Atreus: Greek Tragedy in Greece
Religious Foundations of Greek Culture
The Intersection of Myth and History
The Ancient Greek Cultural Nexus- Art, Archaeology, Literature and Topography
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From 1996-2001 I taught in the
Intellectual Heritage Program at Temple University in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. This page is part of my teaching materials for Intellectual
Heritage 51, a course covering literature and ideas from Sappho through
Shakespeare...
Epic
Qualities of the Sundiata
by
Dr. Janice Siegel
An epic is a long, narrative tale that reflects the totality of a
culture. By the time you are done reading an epic, you know how the people in
this culture live, honor their dead, dress, eat, worship, build their homes,
design their government...what kind of laws they make and how
they enforce them, how they interact with other cultures and much more. Reading
an epic is like seeing a cross section of a culture - all layers are
bared.
Epics are vast in terms of time, scope, and geographical
space: conflicts are bigger than normal: GOOD versus EVIL (see
Milton's Paradise Lost, for example). The Epic hero represents GOOD (according to the mores
of the culture whose epic this is) and the foil, the hero's antagonist, always
has qualities morally and culturally repulsive to the subject culture.
Therefore, the epic hero's victory over his foe is not a personal victory: it is
a cultural triumph! The
metaphorical reading of the specific details of the conflict is always most significant. Ex:
Soumaoro's
habit of wearing footwear of human skin appals us in the same way that the
cannibal monsters of Greek mythology do - they reveal a disrespect for human
life and break a cultural taboo so frightening that they must be eradicated for
the good of all. The threat is metaphorical, for it addresses cultural taboo, but it
is also physical and *real* for it threatens to destroy the very society the
epic represents. While pointing out the differences between cultures, epics
paradoxically and simultaneously also celebrate that part of ourselves
universally shared by all because of our underlying brotherhood in humanity. A
curious double-sided coin, epic is.
All epics present supernatural wonders
beyond our human understanding: epic heroes generally do what we cannot -
Sundiata's battle with Soumaoro is on a different plain than our reality, in the
same way that Odysseus fights the Cyclops (Homer's Odyssey, and Hercules
fights the monster Cacus (Vergil's Aeneid). Every epic hero
repeatedly thwarts death (although he must eventually succumb), either by visiting and returning from the
underworld, which mere mortals cannot do (katabasis), by receiving the help of a
divinity or otherwise supernatural entity, or by using magic to
protect himself from the laws that govern that realm. Witness Sundiata's prayers
to the jinn, and even the ease with which Balla Fasseke calms evil spirits with
music.
In the Sundiata we also have an
example of epic cataloguing to acknowledge the participation of variety of tribes, peoples,
city-states in the victory Sundiata brings to Mali. Just like in the song by Martha and
the Vandellas, Dancing in the Streets, when everyone gets together for a
recitation of the tale, you cheer when your home town is mentioned - in the Iliad, we have long lists of cities
and their constituent families who provided men and ships to the Trojan
War effort, and in the Sundiata, we have a recitation of the different tribes
who allied with Sundiata and contributed to defeating Soumaoro in the Battle of
Krina.
Genealogy is also particularly
highlighted in epics. The overall purpose of an epic is to
validate/celebrate/perpetuate the cultural identity of a people by making them a
part of something bigger than what they are as individuals; a recitation of an
individual's genealogy serves a similar purpose: it inserts people into the stream of
their cultural history, heritage,
and achievement by connecting them with their personal past, all of which has
contributed to the greatness of their cultural present.
For more on the
qualities of mythic heroes see Dr.
J's Illustrated Mythic Hero lecture.
copyright
2001 Janice
Siegel,
All Rights Reserved
send comments to: Janice Siegel (jfsiege@ilstu.edu)
date this page was edited last:
10/25/2005
the URL
of this page:
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