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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. What is the name of the new friend the narrator makes at the beginning of the novel?
2. How does Zorba live his life?
3. With what does the narrator compare his lustful feelings for the widow to?
4. What makes the narrator want the widow even more?
5. What does Zorba's gift prompt Madame Hortense to do?
Short Essay Questions
1. What feelings does Zorba express about religion?
2. Describe Zorba's categories of marriage and how many of each he's experienced.
3. How does the narrator try to get the widow out of his mind at the beginning of Chapter 10?
4. What does Karayannis's letter from Africa remind the narrator that he has always wanted to do?
5. What does Zorba represent in the story?
6. How might Madame Hortense's romantic history challenge Zorba's concept of his own manliness?
7. When Zorba tells the story of the old man who will never die, what does this show about his own and the narrator's perspectives on life and death?
8. Describe the narrator's memory of his old friend while on their visit to the museum.
9. What reasons does Zorba give in Chapter 9 for so intensely wanting the narrator to go and sleep with the widow?
10. Why is the narrator going to Crete?
Essay Topics
Write an essay for ONE of the following topics:
Essay Topic 1
The santuri instrument is an important symbol throughout the novel. It is one of many modes of expression between the two main characters.
Part 1) What does the santuri symbolize in terms of language?
Part 2) What is the significance of the fact that Zorba brags about his talent on the instrument yet will only play it when he's in the mood?
Part 3) Why do you think the santuri is the object left to the narrator when Zorba dies?
Essay Topic 2
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?
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. What is the name of the new friend the narrator makes at the beginning of the novel?
Zorba.
2. How does Zorba live his life?
He lives like every day is his last.
3. With what does the narrator compare his lustful feelings for the widow to?
The temptation of Buddha by the Evil One.
4. What makes the narrator want the widow even more?
He has a brush with death.
5. What does Zorba's gift prompt Madame Hortense to do?
Talk about her love affairs.
Short Essay Answer Key
1. What feelings does Zorba express about religion?
Zorba claims to be an atheist. However, when it comes to the other villagers, Zorba believes that religion is not only important but is the center of their way of life. He warns the narrator that speaking against religion to the villagers is not wise as it is better for them than having no organized structure at all.
2. Describe Zorba's categories of marriage and how many of each he's experienced.
Zorba says he's been married "honestly," "half-honestly," and "dishonestly." He says that he's been married "honestly" or legally only once. He says that he's been "half-honestly" married, or in relationships similar to marriage that were not made formal and legal with a wedding, two times. He says that he's been "dishonestly" married a thousand times, and by this he is referring to every sexual encounter he's ever had.
3. How does the narrator try to get the widow out of his mind at the beginning of Chapter 10?
The narrator views the widow as a temptation of the Evil One and focuses on writing his Buddha Manuscript in order to exorcise her image and the lust he feels for her from his mind. To him, his writing is comparable to the force of savages facing beasts with their spears.
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. What does Zorba represent in the story?
Zorba represents a man who lives for the physical world and ultimately for the individual self in that world. He is an agent of instinct and lacks theoretical reason for his actions. For the narrator, Zorba is a potential symbol of freedom in the narrator's quest to find freedom.
6. How might Madame Hortense's romantic history challenge Zorba's concept of his own manliness?
Zorba believes in living for the day and that any impediment to freedom and manliness should be removed. Because he thinks sexual relationships are the ultimate in the physical life, he is helpless against the force of her own history. She has been romanced by legendary and powerful men, and Zorba cannot do anything to remove them as competitive forces from his own life. He offers to take on Canavaro's role in her life, but he has no power or awareness of how to actually fulfill that role.
7. When Zorba tells the story of the old man who will never die, what does this show about his own and the narrator's perspectives on life and death?
Neither the narrator nor Zorba come to a conclusion about how one should live one's life. Zorba clearly lives as though each day is his last, in opposition to the old man in his story. The narrator is uncertain and contemplative about life and death and seems to change his mind slightly as he is influenced by different thinking.
8. Describe the narrator's memory of his old friend while on their visit to the museum.
The narrator's old friend told him of his love for a painting by Rembrandt; a painting he says he will owe his greatest accomplishments to. As they are leaving the museum, they see a bird land on a statue of an Amazon and begin singing. The narrator asks what it might mean, and the friend recites a few lines that encourage the narrator not to bother himself with such thoughts.
9. 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.
10. Why is the narrator going to Crete?
The narrator is curious about the adventurous life his friend preached to him. He is going to Crete to experiment with such a life by renting a lignite mine and thus engaging more with the physical world. His overall goal in these actions is to find freedom through a marriage of the mind and body.
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This section contains 1,239 words (approx. 5 pages at 300 words per page) |


