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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. Who does Zaharia say inspired his mission?
2. Who challenges Zorba to a knife fight near the widow's garden?
3. When the narrator meets an old man on the trail, where does the man ask if he's headed?
4. What miracle do the monks come down from the mountain to share?
5. Upon his return from Candia, what does Zorba encourage the narrator to quickly get started on?
Short Essay Questions
1. How did Zaharia appear when he was found dead?
2. Why does Anagnosti say that Pavli is blessed?
3. How does the narrator describe eternity in Chapter 15?
4. What two major shifts happen to the narrator in Chapter 21? What major realization do these shifts spur in the narrator.
5. Why do you think the narrator's good friend, the soldier, is not named until his death?
6. What does the narrator state is the reason for Zaharia's death?
7. As the narrator watches Zorba comfort Madame Hortense on her death bed with the others eagerly awaiting her death, what does he compare the scene to?
8. What does Zorba say about the act of crying when Madame Hortense dies?
9. What does Zorba say about women when the narrator reveals that he has proposed to Madame Hortense on his behalf?
10. What was Zaharia's inspiration for burning down the monastery?
Essay Topics
Write an essay for ONE of the following topics:
Essay Topic 1
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 2
Zorba has a complex relationship with the female sex. The narrator regards him as misogynistic, but he, at times, seems to afford women more freedoms than the average villager.
Part 1) Under what category of his "marriages" would Zorba's relationship with Madame Hortense fall under? Why?
• How does Zorba treat her differently than the other villagers do?
• Does his treatment of her fall in line with his claim that women have less moral strength than men?
Part 2) Zorba tells a story of his brother threatening to kill his daughter for becoming pregnant out of wedlock upon which he offers no opinion. He also reveals that to his greatest love he was only "half-honestly" married.
• Do you think Zorba is a misogynist?
• How does his behavior with women deviate from traditional values?
• Does this make him less of a misogynist?
• Do any of his behaviors make him more "free"?
Part 3) How does Zorba's description of Zeus, the overworked love slave, contradict his misogyny? Does it support it?
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. Who does Zaharia say inspired his mission?
Archangel Michael.
2. Who challenges Zorba to a knife fight near the widow's garden?
Manolakas.
3. When the narrator meets an old man on the trail, where does the man ask if he's headed?
The convent.
4. What miracle do the monks come down from the mountain to share?
The Holy Virgin of Revenge has killed Zaharia.
5. Upon his return from Candia, what does Zorba encourage the narrator to quickly get started on?
The timber rail project.
Short Essay Answer Key
1. 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.
2. Why does Anagnosti say that Pavli is blessed?
Pavli commits suicide by drowning, and Anagnosti says that he is blessed because he is free from the object of his desire, the widow. Anagnosti claims that Pavli could not have lived happily with or without her because he had so much passion for her but now he is at peace.
3. How does the narrator describe eternity in Chapter 15?
He describes it as being each minute that passes.
4. 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.
5. Why do you think the narrator's good friend, the soldier, is not named until his death?
It may be to emphasize the theme of the importance of human interaction and companionship. Just as the narrator is gaining the realization that human connection is essential, his friend dies and his friend's name is revealed. His friend has also fulfilled his passion, which was to serve his country. His name is then symbolically mythologized when it appears in the story.
6. 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.
7. As the narrator watches Zorba comfort Madame Hortense on her death bed with the others eagerly awaiting her death, what does he compare the scene to?
The narrator first compares the scene to a huge exotic bird with a broken wing that has fallen and is dying on the beach, with all of the villagers standing around watching for entertainment. Then he compares Madame Hortense to other animals as well, like an "old angora cat" and "a sick old seal."
8. What does Zorba say about the act of crying when Madame Hortense dies?
He says that he isn't ashamed to cry in front of men because of the unity they share. He says that crying in front of women is different because it is a man's job to prove his courage when before women.
9. What does Zorba say about women when the narrator reveals that he has proposed to Madame Hortense on his behalf?
Zorba says that women are delicate creatures and are unable to handle such jokes.
10. What was Zaharia's inspiration for burning down the monastery?
He says he was acting on a mission assigned to him by Archangel Michael. He acted, however, based on the knowledge he received from Zorba.
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This section contains 1,156 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |


