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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. How did Zorba temporarily keep track of his sexual relationships?
2. How does Zorba live his life?
3. What exclamation does the first chapter conclude with?
4. About what does Zorba confront the miners?
5. How does Lola refer to Zorba?
Short Essay Questions
1. Describe the narrator's memory of his old friend while on their visit to the museum.
2. What significance does the fact that Madame Hortense is a widow have toward the theme of manliness?
3. Describe the first time that the narrator sees the widow.
4. What kinds of responsibilities does Zorba take on at the initiation of his friendship with the narrator.
5. How does Zorba's version of the devil living inside him compare to Zorba himself?
6. What does Zorba's version of God look like?
7. How does the fact that Zorba is missing half of his finger relate to his connection between manliness and freedom?
8. In Chapter 3, how are the relationships between men and women on Crete exhibited?
9. Why is the narrator going to Crete?
10. Describe the narrator's counter argument to Zorba's connection between manliness and freedom regarding his missing finger?
Essay Topics
Write an essay for ONE of the following topics:
Essay Topic 1
Being present in the moment is a major theme in Zorba the Greek. Kazantzakis utilizes Zorba to literally reinforce this to the narrator but provides him with an array of symbolic messages as well.
Part 1) Describe the narrator's memory of destroying the butterfly cocoon. How did this impact him?
• How does this make him more receptive to Zorba's advice?
• How does it make him less so?
Part 2) Zorba says that the act of celebrating is more important than the object of celebration.
• How is this a message of presence?
• Could Zorba's atheism be a similar symbol of presence? How so?
Part 3) The narrator believes that he can channel his sexual energy for the widow into the Buddha manuscript.
• Do you agree that such an act is possible?
• Is it possible for him to stay present in his physical body as he attempts this?
Essay Topic 2
In the beginning of the story, the narrator is reading a book called The Dialogue of Buddha and the Shepherd, which encourages the virtue of possessing nothing. By the end of the story, he has exorcised the Buddha as an inhabitant of the Void where abstract and unhelpful thinking occurs.
Part 1) How does the appearance of his reading material foreshadow the narrator's experience?
Part 2) Describe the asset that the narrator discovers to be most essential to life. Is this asset truly a possession?
Part 3) Describe Zorba's relationship with possessions. Would he consider his experiences to be his possessions?
Essay Topic 3
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?
Short Answer Key
1. How did Zorba temporarily keep track of his sexual relationships?
He cut off a lock of each lover's hair.
2. How does Zorba live his life?
He lives like every day is his last.
3. What exclamation does the first chapter conclude with?
"God and the Devil!"
4. About what does Zorba confront the miners?
Failing to get their picks before exiting.
5. How does Lola refer to Zorba?
Grandad.
Short Essay Answer Key
1. 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.
2. What significance does the fact that Madame Hortense is a widow have toward the theme of manliness?
Madame Hortense is a character on whom Zorba and the narrator choose instantly to rely upon for shelter. The fact that she is completely devoid of Zorba's "manliness" (as a widowed woman) and has outlived her four great lovers, admirals who could be classified as the most manly of all men, speaks to a contrasting energy of freedom neither articulated by the narrator nor by Zorba.
3. Describe the first time that the narrator sees the widow.
The narrator and Zorba duck into a cafe in the middle of a rainstorm, and from here, they see the widow run past the window. The narrator immediately finds her beautiful, although there are a variety of responses to her presence, not all of them positive. Soon after, Mimiko enters and reports that the widow has lost her sheep and offers a reward to anyone who can help return it to her.
4. 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.
5. 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.
6. What does Zorba's version of God look like?
Zorba claims to be an atheist, but he does tell the narrator that God is likely a more outrageous version of himself for whom forgiveness is not difficult, and who does not want to be worshiped.
7. How does the fact that Zorba is missing half of his finger relate to his connection between manliness and freedom?
Zorba says that he cut part of his finger off because it got in the way of making pottery. He argues that anything that gets in the way of man doing what he wants should be removed. Because it takes a great deal of physical and mental courage to remove a body part, the connection for Zorba is strong.
8. In Chapter 3, how are the relationships between men and women on Crete exhibited?
In the beginning of the chapter, the narrator's encounter with the young women in the country exhibits the historical impact of war and violence on the male/female relationship. They are immediately frightened of him as a stranger, and so their encounter is stunted. Mavrandoni's offer to let the men stay in his house to avoid the scandal of staying with a woman also exhibits a level of division and acceptable interaction between men and women.
9. 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.
10. 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.
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This section contains 1,184 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |


