2220  Classical  Mythology

Classics  2220  Classical  Mythology   The  Ohio  State  University  |  Autumn  2015

Essay  #2

Assignment   In  our  lectures  on  the  Odyssey  our  discussions  about  spousal  relationships  have  focused  on   couples.  For  introductory  purposes  this  makes  sense,  since  the  Odyssey  features  a  husband-­‐ wife  pair  as  its  main  characters.  Yet,  one  of  our  fundamental  assumptions  is  that  readers  of   all  sorts  stand  to  learn  a  lot  about  personal  relationships  through  a  close  and  thoughtful   reading  of  the  Odyssey.  What  about  single  persons?  For  this  essay  think  about  what  non-­‐ married  persons  stand  to  learn  about  long-­‐term,  exclusive,  marrige-­‐type  relationships.           Imagine  that  the  Office  of  Student  Life  at  The  Ohio  State  University  is  putting  together  a   booklet  on  relationship  advice  based  on  famous  works  of  literature.  They  have   commissioned  you  to  write  the  section  on  Homer’s  Odyssey  and  they  want  to  know:   According  to  the  Odyssey,  what  kind  of  spouse  should  a  single  person  be  looking  for?  What   kind  of  potential  spouse  should  a  single  person  strive  to  be  in  order  to  gain  the  attention  of   another  would-­‐be  spouse?  Answers  to  this  question  will  likely  talk  about  homophrosyne   (though  they  don’t  have  to);  but  it  is  not  enough  to  say,  “Single  persons  should  look  for   homophrosyne.”  Think  deeper,  define  your  terms,  and  be  specific.     With  this  thematic  focus  and  imaginative  frame,  in  this  essay  you  must  answer  the   following  question:

• What  is  the  most  important  lesson  that  single  persons  stand  to  learn  from  the   Odyssey?

The  essay  must  state  its  thesis  in  a  short  introductory  paragraph,  followed  by  a  few  body   paragraphs  actually  making  the  argument.  As  part  of  its  evidence  the  essay  must  cite   specific  passages  of  the  Odyssey    at  least  three  times  (not  necessarily  quote,  but  cite),  using   book  number  and  page  number  in  the  Mandelbaum  translation:  2.30  =  book  2,  page  30.  You   may  only  use  the  Odyssey  as  evidence.  Further  details  are  below.  For  more  tips  on  writing   this  type  of  essay,  a  post-­‐writing  checklist,  and  student  examples  from  essay  1,  see  the   relevant  documents  on  Carmen.       Assigned:  Fri,  Sep  25.       Due:  Fri,  Oct  2  by  11am  in  Carmen’s  Dropbox,  formatted  as  a  Word  doc  or  pdf.       Rubric  on  following  page.

Classics  2220  Classical  Mythology   The  Ohio  State  University  |  Autumn  2015

Rubric   Formatting  &  Length     _____  /  1   Is  the  paper  appropriately  formatted?

• 12-­‐point,  Times  New  Roman  font  in  black   • 1.5  spacing   • 1  inch  margins

_____  /  1   Is  the  paper  the  appropriate  length?     • 1  page   • The  student’s  name  and  essay  title  should  be  on  the  first  line,  and  the

essay  itself  should  start  on  the  second;  no  additional  space  should  be   taken  up  with  headers,  dates,  etc.

• Anything  over  the  page  limit  will  not  be  considered  part  of  the  essay.       Thesis   _____  /  3   Does  the  thesis

• adequately  answer  the  question  posed  in  the  assignment,     • provide  a  sufficient  reason  for  that  position,     • and  provide  a  mini  outline  of  the  points  the  essay  will  make  to  argue  the

thesis?       Supporting  Paragraphs   _____  /  2   Argument:  do  the  supporting  paragraphs  sufficiently  argue  the  thesis?       _____  /  2   Evidence:  does  the  essay  use  sufficient  evidence  from  the  texts,  and  cite  it

correctly,  to  support  the  argument?       Grammar  &  Other  Mechanics  of  Writing   _____  /  1   Does  the  essay  use  proper  grammar,  spelling,  and  punctuation,  and  is  the

prose  clear?         TOTAL     __________  /  10