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This test consists of 5 short answer questions, 10 short essay questions, and 1 (of 3) essay topics.
Short Answer Questions
1. Which of her lovers' names does Madame Hortense's parrot repeat?
2. What are the names of Zorba's two "half-honest" lovers?
3. While Zorba and the narrator are in the shop, who runs past the window?
4. The narrator warn Zorba that such passions may lead to the removal of what body part?
5. When the narrator meets some young women on his first day in Crete, how do the girls respond?
Short Essay Questions
1. What kinds of responsibilities does Zorba take on at the initiation of his friendship with the narrator.
2. How does Zorba's version of the devil living inside him compare to Zorba himself?
3. What reasons does Zorba give in Chapter 9 for so intensely wanting the narrator to go and sleep with the widow?
4. What does Karayannis's letter from Africa remind the narrator that he has always wanted to do?
5. When the narrator observes Zorba's ease with problem solving in Chapter 5, what figures come into his mind?
6. Describe the painting that Zorba presents to Madame Hortense.
7. Describe the narrator's counter argument to Zorba's connection between manliness and freedom regarding his missing finger?
8. Do you think the narrator has actually lost all interest and faith in poetry as he claims in Chapter 12? How so?
9. When the narrator makes an attempt to get to know some of the mine workers, he begins to discuss socialism with them. Zorba does not like this. What are his reasons?
10. What is Zorba's account of God's creation of woman?
Essay Topics
Write an essay for ONE of the following topics:
Essay Topic 1
A constant struggle in the novel exists between what is fated and what is the result of enacted will.
Part 1) How do the narrator and Zorba differ on the topic of fate? Does either one think that fate can be altered?
Part 2) How does his opinion on fate impact the way the narrator handles his relationship with the widow? What is Zorba's opinion on this?
Part 3) Zorba indicates that he believes all men fall into the marriage "trap" eventually. He also speaks of men and women's particular and inborn flaws. Would these opinions be relegations to fate, or would they, by Zorba's law, be things that an active will could prevent?
Essay Topic 2
Dualism is an important part of Zorba the Greek. Wherever one theory or way of being is presented, a counter theory exists.
Part 1) When the villagers kill the widow, how are they subverting Zorba's definition of women?
• Which of the two ways of thinking is more accurate?
• How might these extremes support the author's overall intention?
Part 2) How do Zorba and Hortense view their relationship to one another?
• Does Hortense's view of her own past match the way Zorba recounts her history?
• Does Zorba see himself as the partner to her that she sees in him?
• How do their opposing views ultimately affect their relationship?
• Why is she so fixated on marrying Zorba?
Part 3) Do you think that the Buddha has been completed or destroyed for the narrator at the end of the story?
Essay Topic 3
Zorba offers a range of religious thought. At times, he calls himself an atheist. Later, he describes God and the devil to be exactly like himself. Still later, he rewrites Christianity, claiming that Jesus is an heir to Zeus.
Part 1) Describe Zorba's relationship to the religion of the villagers. How does he react to it?
Part 2) Based on dialogue and actions, Is Zorba truly an atheist? Why?
Part 3) How does the irony of Zorba's religious talk instruct the narrator on his path to exorcising his own philosophical thought?
Short Answer Key
1. Which of her lovers' names does Madame Hortense's parrot repeat?
Canavaro.
2. What are the names of Zorba's two "half-honest" lovers?
Sophinka and Noussa.
3. While Zorba and the narrator are in the shop, who runs past the window?
A beautiful widow.
4. The narrator warn Zorba that such passions may lead to the removal of what body part?
The sexual organs.
5. When the narrator meets some young women on his first day in Crete, how do the girls respond?
Fearfully.
Short Essay Answer Key
1. What kinds of responsibilities does Zorba take on at the initiation of his friendship with the narrator.
Zorba agrees to act as foreman of the lignite mine. He also promises to cook the narrator soup and play him music on his santuri.
2. How does Zorba's version of the devil living inside him compare to Zorba himself?
Zorba says that the devil is a mirror image of himself. The only difference is that the devil refuses to grow old. He also wears a red carnation behind his ear.
3. What reasons does Zorba give in Chapter 9 for so intensely wanting the narrator to go and sleep with the widow?
He says that women need men to sleep with them and protect them; that it is a part of a greater plan. He says she will be ruined if a man does not go and sleep with her. He also says that not taking the opportunity to sleep with her is one sin that God will not forgive.
4. What does Karayannis's letter from Africa remind the narrator that he has always wanted to do?
He has a desire to see and touch as much of the world as he possibly can before he dies.
5. When the narrator observes Zorba's ease with problem solving in Chapter 5, what figures come into his mind?
The narrator realizes that Zorba's mind is not stressed with education and that his problem solving is a result of his connection with the physical world. He compares Zorba to Alexander the Great cutting through the Gordian knot with his sword. His notes that it is difficult to miss with feet planted firmly and held by the weight of the entire body. This leads him to compare Zorba to the serpent worshiped by Africans. He notes that anything so connected with and touching the earth constantly must be superior in its understanding of the earth's workings.
6. Describe the painting that Zorba presents to Madame Hortense.
The painting has four huge battleships on it in red, gold, gray, and black, each with a flag from one of four countries: England, France, Italy, and Russia. Leading the battleship as a siren was Madame Hortense, naked with a yellow ribbon around her neck and holding four strings attached to the ships.
7. Describe the narrator's counter argument to Zorba's connection between manliness and freedom regarding his missing finger?
The narrator argues that although such passions are admirable, they could also possibly lead to the desire to remove more crucial body parts. He suggests that Zorba might eventually want to remove his sexual organs, which would have a much more life-altering and drastic result.
8. Do you think the narrator has actually lost all interest and faith in poetry as he claims in Chapter 12? How so?
No. When the narrator says of the Buddha, "I must mobilize words and their necromantic power...invoke magic rhythms; lay siege to him, cast a spell over him and drive him out of my entrails! I must throw over him the net of images, catch him and free myself!" he demonstrates a transformation in the way he sees poetry. He sees it less as contemplation and more as a physical act of using language. His use of the craft has changed, but it is untrue that he no longer has use for it as he so claims.
9. When the narrator makes an attempt to get to know some of the mine workers, he begins to discuss socialism with them. Zorba does not like this. What are his reasons?
Zorba believes that supervising a workforce requires complete authority. He thinks it's better if they believe they have fewer rights and that workers who feel like they are equal to their bosses will eventually take rights away from their bosses.
10. What is Zorba's account of God's creation of woman?
Zorba says that when God removed the rib from Adam, the devil turned into a snake and snatched the rib and ran off with it. God then chased the devil and caught him, but the devil ultimately got away while God was left holding only his horns. God then made woman out of the devil's horns rather than the rib of Adam.
This section contains 1,148 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |