Name: _________________________ | Period: ___________________ |
This test consists of 5 short answer questions, 10 short essay questions, and 1 (of 3) essay topics.
Short Answer Questions
1. In Chapter 16,what type of power does the narrator attempt to describe?
2. What does Zorba ask the narrator to explain to him in Chapter 24?
3. How does Zorba feel about the narrator's false promises made while Zorba was in Candia?
4. What is the statue of Our Lady of Revenge notorious for?
5. How does Zorba say that he gets rid of intense longings?
Short Essay Questions
1. Describe what happened while Zorba was at war that changed his mind about judging a person based on nationality.
2. How are Zorba's final moments described?
3. How did Zaharia appear when he was found dead?
4. What is the irony of Zorba comparing himself to Zeus in Chapter 19?
5. How does the narrator describe eternity in Chapter 15?
6. After the widow's murder, what happens when Zorba and Manolakas meet near the widow's garden?
7. What two major shifts happen to the narrator in Chapter 21? What major realization do these shifts spur in the narrator.
8. In Chapter 16, what did the sleeping workmen do who when they heard Zorba playing his Santuri?
9. What does the narrator state is the reason for Zaharia's death?
10. What does the narrator succeed in doing in Chapter 21 that Zorba could not?
Essay Topics
Write an essay for ONE of the following topics:
Essay Topic 1
Zorba describes sex as the essence of paradise and not at all an impediment to gaining "freedom." Simultaneously, he describes man as a servant sent to please women sexually.
Part 1) Is Zorba's description of Zeus, a creature beaten to sexual exhaustion in his service to women, mutually exclusive to his claims of manly freedom or are they indeed one and the same?
Part 2) The narrator uses less aggression when approaching women, yet he's able to use some of Zorba's advice to good result. Do you think the teacher or the student better masters Zorba's twofold theory on sexuality?
Essay Topic 2
Kazantzakis injects the epistolary into the trajectory of the novel. Some of the characters express more emotion with this mode of communication, while it is simply different for others.
Part 1) The reader gets to know the narrator's soldier friend only by way of the narrator's memories and letters between the men.
• How is their relationship different in letters than it would be in person?
• What other forms of communication do the two men practice?
• Which do you think is the strongest between them?
Part 2) Zorba writes to the narrator from Candia.
• Is his expression altered, impaired, or improved upon by letter writing?
• Do the two characters grow closer through the exchange?
Part 3) Letter writing could be classified under what Zorba calls pen-pushing.
• Do you think the letter writing between the men is a less physical form of interaction than speaking?
• Why or why not?
Essay Topic 3
The narrator's intuition is a powerful asset which returns to him over and over as a sort of interface between the mind, body, and soul.
Part 1) Describe how the narrator's intuition works when he fabricates a letter from Zorba to Madame Hortense.
• How is he able to come up with Zorba's private terms of endearment?
• Do you think this level of intuition is more an act of the mind, the body, the soul, or some combination of the three?
Part 2) Do you think Zorba or the narrator is the more intuitive man?
• Taking into account their respective histories, what elements might have developed intuition more in one character or the other?
• Is intuition a product of being physically present or might it have developed as compensation for indulgence in a life of books?
Part 3) The narrator also exercises his intuition when he foresees Stavridaki's peril. Look for other instances in which the narrator seems to sense reality.
• How are these different from the way that Zorba considers reality?
• Does the narrator become more or less intuitive as the novel progresses?
• Does Zorba impact this characteristic in him?
Short Answer Key
1. In Chapter 16,what type of power does the narrator attempt to describe?
The power of the mind concentrated on one thing.
2. What does Zorba ask the narrator to explain to him in Chapter 24?
Death and why people die.
3. How does Zorba feel about the narrator's false promises made while Zorba was in Candia?
He is angry but willing to follow through on the promise.
4. What is the statue of Our Lady of Revenge notorious for?
Killing an Algerian army.
5. How does Zorba say that he gets rid of intense longings?
Stuffing himself gluttonously with the desired thing.
Short Essay Answer Key
1. Describe what happened while Zorba was at war that changed his mind about judging a person based on nationality.
While at war, Zorba murdered a Bulgarian priest who had been invading Greek villages and killing Greeks. Later, when Zorba sees the orphans of the priest, he realizes that nationality doesn't matter. Rather, "good" and "bad" are the only important classifications to consider.
2. How are Zorba's final moments described?
Zorba dies howling and laughing like an animal.
3. How did Zaharia appear when he was found dead?
He was found shaven bald and pierced with the spear of the Holy Virgin of Revenge.
4. What is the irony of Zorba comparing himself to Zeus in Chapter 19?
Zorba says that he is like Zeus in that he sacrifices his own self in order to bring women happiness. This is ironic because Zeus is traditionally considered to be lecherous towards women.
5. How does the narrator describe eternity in Chapter 15?
He describes it as being each minute that passes.
6. After the widow's murder, what happens when Zorba and Manolakas meet near the widow's garden?
Manolakas challenges Zorba to a knife fight after having been beaten previously. Zorba tells him he will fight without weapons. Then the narrator intervenes and talks them down from fighting at all. They end up all drinking together.
7. What two major shifts happen to the narrator in Chapter 21? What major realization do these shifts spur in the narrator.
The narrator finally sleeps with the widow, which Zorba has been encouraging him to do for some time. The narrator also finishes the Buddha Manuscript and with it, has the realization that he has exorcised the Buddha from himself. These two shifts make it clear to the narrator that "the soul is flesh as well," or in other words the actions of his body are just as important and spiritual as the meditating and thinking to which he is accustomed.
8. In Chapter 16, what did the sleeping workmen do who when they heard Zorba playing his Santuri?
They got up, circled around him and began dancing to the music he played.
9. What does the narrator state is the reason for Zaharia's death?
The narrator says that Zaharia has fulfilled his main passion and purpose and has therefore accomplished everything that life would ask of him, so he can die.
10. What does the narrator succeed in doing in Chapter 21 that Zorba could not?
The narrator recognizes that Madame Hortense is seriously ill and takes care of her both mentally and physically. He mentally encourages her by reminding her of her wedding while physically bringing a doctor to attend to her. He uses Zorba's romantic speech tricks while conscientiously attending to her health as well. Zorba, on the other hand, is a successful romantic but not a responsible partner.
This section contains 1,076 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |