enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Odyssey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odyssey

    These scenes are told by the poet to represent an important transition in Odysseus' journey: being concealed to returning home. [ 29 ] Calypso's name comes from the Greek word kalúptō ( καλύπτω ), meaning 'to cover' or 'conceal', which is apt, as this is exactly what she does with Odysseus. [ 30 ]

  3. Odysseus (oratorio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odysseus_(oratorio)

    Frontispiece of the first edition of Bruch's Odysseus Max Bruch. Odysseus: Szenen aus der Odyssee für Chor, Solostimmen und Orchester (Odysseus: Scenes from the Odyssey for Choir, Solo Voices and Orchestra) is a secular oratorio (Op. 41) composed by Max Bruch and first performed in 1873. [1] It was Bruch's most successful work in his own ...

  4. The Return (2024 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Return_(2024_film)

    The Return is a 2024 drama film directed by Uberto Pasolini and starring Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche.The film is a retelling of the last sections of Homer's Odyssey as adapted by Edward Bond, John Collee, and Pasolini.

  5. The Odyssey (1997 miniseries) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odyssey_(1997_miniseries)

    The Odyssey is a 1997 American mythology–adventure television miniseries based on the ancient Greek epic poem by Homer, the Odyssey. [1] Directed by Andrei Konchalovsky and co-produced by Hallmark Entertainment and American Zoetrope, the miniseries aired in two parts beginning on May 18, 1997, on NBC.

  6. Argos (dog) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argos_(dog)

    Argos's scene is placed in the middle of the seventeenth book of the poem and is a part of its larger visitation narrative, where Odysseus goes to meet his wife's suitors, and both the scene and the larger narrative are an inversion of the expected "hospitality ritual". [21]

  7. Suitors of Penelope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suitors_of_Penelope

    Eurymachus, son of Polybus, is the second of the suitors to appear in the epic.Eurymachus acts as a leader among the suitors because of his charisma. He is noted to be the most likely to win Penelope's hand because her father and brothers support the union and because he outdoes the other suitors in gift-giving.

  8. Penelope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penelope

    Penelope. Drawing after Attic pottery figure. Penelope encounters the returned Odysseus posing as a beggar. From a mural in the Macellum of Pompeii. Penelope (/ p ə ˈ n ɛ l ə p i / [1] pə-NEL-ə-pee; Ancient Greek: Πηνελόπεια, Pēnelópeia, or Πηνελόπη, Pēnelópē) [2] is a character in Homer's Odyssey.

  9. Ulysses Deriding Polyphemus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulysses_Deriding_Polyphemus

    Ulysses Deriding Polyphemus is an 1829 oil painting by Joseph Mallord William Turner.It depicts a scene from Homer's Odyssey, showing Odysseus (Ulysses) standing on his ship deriding Polyphemus, one of the cyclopes he encounters and has recently blinded, who is disguised behind one of the mountains on the left side. [1]