The Odyssey (
Greek: Ὀδύσσεια, Odýsseia) is one of two major ancient Greek epic poems attributed to
Homer. It is, in part, a sequel to the Iliad, the other work ascribed to Homer. The poem is fundamental to the modern
Western canon, and is the second oldest extant work of
Western literature, the Iliad being the oldest. It is believed to have been composed near the end of the
8th century BC, somewhere in
Ionia, the Greek coastal region of
Anatolia.
Cyclops by
Euripides, the only extant satyr play, retells the respective episode with a humorous twist.
True Story, written by
Lucian of Samosata in the
2nd century AD, mentions the
Odysseus of the
Odyssey as the first to make up fantastical tales.
Some of the tales of
Sinbad the Sailor from
The Book of
One Thousand and One Nights were taken from the Odyssey.[citation needed]
Merugud Uilix maicc Leirtis ("On the Wandering of
Ulysses, son of
Laertes") is an eccentric Old
Irish version of the material; the work exists in a
12th-century AD manuscript that linguists believe is based on an
8th-century original.[citation needed]
Dante Alighieri has Odysseus append a new ending to the Odyssey in canto
XXVI of the
Inferno.
Il ritorno d'Ulisse in
Patria, first performed in 1640, is an opera by
Monteverdi based on the second half of
Homer's Odyssey.
Every episode of
James Joyce's modernist novel Ulysses (1922) has an assigned theme, technique and correspondences between its characters and those of Homer's Odyssey.
The first canto of
Ezra Pound's
The Cantos (1922) is both a translation and a retelling of Odysseus' journey to the underworld.
Nikos Kazantzakis aspires to continue the poem and explore more modern concerns in The Odyssey: A
Modern Sequel (
1938).
The
1954 Broadway musical The Golden Apple by librettist
John Treville Latouche and composer
Jerome Moross is freely adapted from the Iliad and the Odyssey, re-setting the action to the
American state of
Washington in the years after the
Spanish-American War, with events inspired by the Iliad in
Act One and events inspired by the Odyssey in
Act Two.
In
Jean-Luc Godard's film
Le Mépris (
1963),
German film director
Fritz Lang plays himself attempting to direct a film
adaptation of the Odyssey.
The Japanese-French anime
Ulysses 31 (
1981) updates the ancient setting into a 31st-century space opera.
Omeros (
1991), an epic poem by
Derek Walcott, is in part a retelling of the Odyssey, set on the
Caribbean island of
St. Lucia.
The Odyssey (
1997), a made-for-TV movie directed by
Andrei Konchalovsky, is a slightly abbreviated version of the epic.
Charles Frazier's novel
Cold Mountain (1997) borrows much from the Odyssey to tell the story of an
American Civil War veteran's homecoming.
Similarly,
Daniel Wallace's
Big Fish: A
Novel of Mythic Proportions (
1998) adapts the epic to the
American South, while also incorporating tall tales into its first-person narrative much as Odysseus does in the Apologoi (
Books 9-12).
The Coen Brothers'
2000 film O Brother, Where Art Thou? is loosely based on Homer's poem.[12]
American progressive metal band
Symphony X interprets multiple scenes of the epic in their song, The Odyssey (
2002).
Zachary Mason's
The Lost Books of the Odyssey (
2007) is a series of short stories that rework Homer's original plot in a contemporary style reminiscent of
Italo Calvino.
Dominic Allen's stage play Odyssey loosely adapts the story into a post-apocalyptic setting, basing the Odysseus character on Ezra Pound.
The film
Pandorum has many story elements of the Odyssey.[citation needed]
The film
Ulysses' Gaze (
1995) directed by
Theo Angelopoulos has many of the elements of the Odyssey set against the backdrop of the most recent and previous
Balkan Wars.
An excerpt from the Odyssey appears in graphic-novel form, with art by
Gareth Hinds, in volume one of the anthology
The Graphic Canon. The anthology is edited by
Russ Kick and published by
Seven Stories Press.
In
The Simpsons Fourteenth season episode,
Tales from the Public Domain a re-working of the Odyssey is told by
Homer Simpson (who plays Odysseus in the section).
- published: 19 May 2014
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