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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 attempts to cheer Zorba up following the death of Hortense?
2. How does Zorba change his appearance while in Candia?
3. How does Zorba describe proposal and marriage?
4. How does Zorba compare to Hortense's former lovers in her eyes?
5. How does Zorba say that he gets rid of intense longings?
Short Essay Questions
1. What does the narrator succeed in doing in Chapter 21 that Zorba could not?
2. What two major shifts happen to the narrator in Chapter 21? What major realization do these shifts spur in the narrator.
3. What was Zaharia's inspiration for burning down the monastery?
4. What evidence of artistic inspiration does the narrator find in the ruins of the old city? How does he feel when he sees it?
5. In Chapter 16, what did the sleeping workmen do who when they heard Zorba playing his Santuri?
6. When writing letters to Madame Hortense, what does the narrator have to do?
7. How are Zorba's final moments described?
8. What story does Zorba tell in Chapter 20 that supports the theme that appearance creates reality?
9. In his third theory of religion, what does the bishop give as God's reason for sending religion to the masses?
10. What does Zorba say about women when the narrator reveals that he has proposed to Madame Hortense on his behalf?
Essay Topics
Write an essay for ONE of the following topics:
Essay Topic 1
Human management of the desire for material things and other people is a central crux of the characters' experiences.
Part 1) How does Zorba suggest that intense desire be sated?
• How is this similar to the narrator's act of writing the Buddha Manuscript?
• Do you think there is more value in lust for abstract philosophizing than in lust for the material world? Or vice versa?
• Are they equally gluttonous attitudes?
Part 2) Zorba notes that all of the monks strongly desire some material thing.
• How does he encourage them to handle their desires?
• Does he encourage Demetrios and Gavrili to handle their lusts similarly?
• Does Zorba's attempt at getting a deal on the land support his theories on desire and satisfaction or contradict them?
Part 3) How do the men at the monastery symbolize the struggle between Zorba and the narrator? Do the bishop's great theories on religion and the abbot's business ventures make the men more like Zorba or more like the narrator?
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
After Zorba's return from Candia, the narrator attempts to convince him that the power of a mind concentrated on one thing is the singular path to great accomplishment.
Part 1) How does Zorba respond to this attempted lesson?
• Is the narrator's lesson on meditation received and practiced or do both file it with the "Void"?
• Do you agree with the narrator?
Part 2) How might concentration on a single thing threaten Zorba's way of life and very existence?
Part 3) Zorba has returned from Candia with an appearance altered to look younger. This is a strange juxtaposition to the narrator's focus on meditation.
• Are there parallels in the two men's behaviors?
• Or are the simply at odds with one another?
Short Answer Key
1. Who attempts to cheer Zorba up following the death of Hortense?
The festival-goers.
2. How does Zorba change his appearance while in Candia?
He dyed his hair black.
3. How does Zorba describe proposal and marriage?
As "the trap."
4. How does Zorba compare to Hortense's former lovers in her eyes?
He is not as exotic.
5. How does Zorba say that he gets rid of intense longings?
Stuffing himself gluttonously with the desired thing.
Short Essay Answer Key
1. 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.
2. 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.
3. 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.
4. What evidence of artistic inspiration does the narrator find in the ruins of the old city? How does he feel when he sees it?
The narrator finds a partially finished jar carved from stone and a chisel on the ground nearby. This fills him with bitterness as he realizes the artistic inspiration has been defeated.
5. 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.
6. When writing letters to Madame Hortense, what does the narrator have to do?
The narrator must pretend he is Zorba. Therefore, he must take on Zorba's characteristics in his writings while looking for the best in Madame Hortense.
7. How are Zorba's final moments described?
Zorba dies howling and laughing like an animal.
8. What story does Zorba tell in Chapter 20 that supports the theme that appearance creates reality?
Zorba tells a story in which his grandfather takes a piece of wood, calls it part of the True Cross, and declares that it will protect the soldier to whom he gifts it from all harm in battle. The soldier then becomes a brave and invincible warrior simply because he believes that he has nothing to fear.
9. In his third theory of religion, what does the bishop give as God's reason for sending religion to the masses?
He says that God sent religion as an act of mercy for the masses in order that they might experience living in "eternity." The bishop believes that only a few people on earth are able to live an eternity during their natural lives on earth.
10. 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.
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This section contains 1,103 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |


