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Course name
The Iliad by Homer with Joseph Pearce
Recorded course taught by Joseph Pearce for High School Ancient Literature
Summary

Sign up for this course to learn with Prof. Joseph Pearce as he guides us through Homer’s classic work. We will examine the ways in which its moral vision harmonizes with that of Christianity, offering timeless insights into the human condition.

Instructor Access (Optional grading support) is available for this course. Please note: this is ONLY recommended if you wish to write the optional paper. All quizzes are internally graded in this course. Optional papers will be completed via this page (click here) for an Instructor Access fee of $75.

  

How to get the most out of The Iliad with Joseph Pearce: 

  1. Students should do the reading assignment for each class prior to the class.

  2. During the class, the student should highlight the passages that Professor Pearce is specifically discussing and review these passages in preparing for the Quiz.

  3. Students should always have two levels of reading in mind: the literal level, i.e. the facts relayed in the narrative, but also the allegorical level, i.e. the deeper meaning that Homer is conveying in his narrating of the facts.

Special Notes: It is recommended that you follow this course with Prof. Pearce’s course The Odyssey by Homer or with another 6-week literature course.

Total Classes: 6

Duration: 55 minutes

Prerequisite: The ability to understand and enjoy The Iliad

Suggested Grade Level: 9th to 12th grade

Suggested Credit: 1/2 semester Literature or English. Add another literature or a writing course for full credit.

Instructor: Joseph Pearce

Course Description: Homer is at the foundation of Western Civilization and is arguably, with the possible exception of Dante and Shakespeare, the greatest writer that Western Civilization has produced. Professor Pearce will guide us through Homer’s classic work, examining the ways in which its moral vision harmonizes with that of Christianity, offering timeless insights into the human condition.

Course Outline:

  • Week One: Books I-IV: Setting the scene; the anger of Achilleus and the will of Zeus; lust and its consequences.

  • Week Two: Books V-VIII: Gods in the fray; Hektor accuses Paris; Hektor’s family; Hektor’s fate; Paris’ obstinacy in sin; Zeus the Almighty?

  • Week Three: Books IX-XII: Agamemnon’s dilemma; anger and its consequences; love and lust; prayer and suffering; the pride of Achilles; Hate unleashed; the power of Zeus; the power of Hektor.

  • Week Four: Books XIII-XVI: Zeus versus Poseidon: Menelaos the philosopher; a doctrine of grace; Hektor accuses Paris again; the seduction of Zeus; the teasing of Hera; Zeus sleeps; the omnipotence of Zeus; the “omnipotence” of Hektor; the hardness of Achilleus; Zeus weeps; Hektor slays Patroklos.

  • Week Five: Books XVII-XX: Men as toys of the gods?; the indifference of the gods?; Zeus’ pity?; Achilleus regrets his anger; Homer’s judgment; Achilleus rekindles his anger; the armour of the gods; women to blame?; the goddess Delusion; reckless anger; Achilleus the blameless?; Zeus versus the gods; the source of Virgil’s Aeneid; Achilleus the merciless.

  • Week Six: Books XXI-XXIV: Achilleus the merciless continued; the gods as toys of Zeus?; the insignificance of mortals?; Priam’s wretched fate; Hektor’s agonizing dilemma; the death of Hektor; Andromache’s grief; the desecration of Hektor’s corpse; death as the shadowlands; the gods protect Hektor’s body; the metaphorical moral; the lust that led to disaster; Zeus intervenes; the theology of the two urns; lamentations for Hektor.

Course MaterialsThe Iliad by Homer. Make sure to obtain the Richmond Lattimore translation, University of Chicago Press, ISBN #0-226-46940-9, https://amzn.to/3ZH7quU

Homework: Homework entails daily reading and weekly quizzes. Quizzes are graded by the computer for immediate feedback.

Technical Help: If you have any technical trouble or questions about course content, please email us at homeschoolconnections@gmail.com. ©2023 Homeschool Connections and Joseph Pearce. All rights reserved. This course is designed by Joseph Pearce.

  • This material is only to be used for its intended purpose by active subscribers of Homeschool Connections. Any other use without explicit permission is in violation of the seventh commandment (yes, the 7th commandment) and in violation of US and International copyright laws.

  • You may print or download to local hard disk extracts for your personal homeschool and non-commercial use only. This is not to be used for homeschool co-ops without express written permission from Homeschool Connections.

 Help: If you experience technical difficulty or have a question about course content, please email us at homeschoolconnections@gmail.com.

Course name
The Iliad by Homer with Joseph Pearce
Instructor
Joseph Pearce
Semester
Recorded
Category
Literature ➤ Ancient Literature
Grade level
High School
Start time
October 27th, 2023 at 12:00 AM ET
Course type
Recorded, free with subscription
Relative due dates
Relative due dates are disabled for this course.

About Joseph Pearce

A native of England, Joseph Pearce is the internationally acclaimed author of many books, which include bestsellers such as The Quest for Shakespeare, Tolkien: Man and Myth, The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde, C. S. Lewis and The Catholic Church, Literary Converts, Wisdom and Innocence: A Life of G.K. Chesterton, Solzhenitsyn: A Soul in Exile and Old Thunder: A Life of Hilaire Belloc.

His books have been published and translated into Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch, Italian, Korean, Mandarin, Croatian and Polish. He has hosted two 13-part television series about Shakespeare on EWTN, and has also written and presented documentaries on EWTN on The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. His verse drama, Death Comes for the War Poets, was performed off-Broadway to critical acclaim. He has participated and lectured at a wide variety of international and literary events at major colleges and universities in the U.S., Canada, Britain, Europe, Africa and South America.

He is Visiting Professor of Literature at Ave Maria University and a Visiting Fellow of Thomas More College of Liberal Arts (Merrimack, New Hampshire). He is editor of the St. Austin Review (https://staustinreview.org/), series editor of the Ignatius Critical Editions (www.ignatiuscriticaleditions.com), senior instructor with Homeschool Connections, and senior contributor at the Imaginative Conservative and Crisis Magazine.

His personal website is http://www.jpearce.co.  

Testimonies from students:

“I appreciated and enjoyed the class, I understood the teacher even with his accent.”

“I LOVE Mr. Pearce's British accent! I also greatly appreciated the email response that was given when I asked a question.”

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