Difference Between Epic and Moc Epic
Difference Between Epic and Moc Epic
Difference Between Epic and Moc Epic
#Difference_between_Epic_and_Mock_Epic
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#The_Epic
The epic is generally de ned: A long narrative poem on a great and serious subject, related in
an elevated style, and centered on a heroic or quasi-divine gure on whose actions depends
the fate of a tribe, a nation, or the human race. The traditional epics were shaped by a literary
artist from historical and legendary materials which had developed in the oral traditions of
his nation during a period of expansion and warfare (Beowulf, The Odyssey, The Iliad).
͗ 1. The hero is a gure of great national or even cosmic importance, usually the ideal man
of his culture. He often has superhuman or divine traits. He has an imposing physical stature
and is greater in all ways than the common man.
͙ 2. The setting is vast in scope. It covers great geographical distances, perhaps even
visiting the underworld, other wortlds, other times.
͗ 4. Supernatural forces interest themselves in the action and intervene at times. The
intervention of the gods is called "machinery."
ʼn 2. Writer invokes a Muse, one of the nine daughters of Zeus. The poet prays to the muses
to provide him with divine inspiration to tell the story of a great hero.
ʼn 3. Narrative opens in media res. This means "in the middle of things," usually with the hero
at his lowest point. Earlier portions of the story appear later as ashbacks.
ʼn 4. Catalogs and geneaologies are given. These long lists of objects, places, and people
place the nite action of the epic within a broader, universal context. Oftentimes, the poet is
also paying homage to the ancestors of audience members.
ʼn
ʼn 5. Main characters give extended formal speeches.
ʼn 6. Use of the epic simile. A standard simile is a comparison using "like" or "as." An epic or
Homeric simile is a more involved, ornate comparison, extended in great detail.
ʼn 7. Heavy use of repetition and stock phrases. The poet repeats passages that consist of
several lines in various sections of the epic and uses homeric epithets, short, recurrent
phrases used to describe people, places, or things. Both made the poem easier to memorize.
Aristotle described six characteristics: "fable, action, characters, sentiments, diction, and
meter." Since then, critics have used these criteria to describe two kinds of epics:
#Epic
#Comic_Epic
When the rst novelists began writing what were later called novels, they thought they were
writing "prose epics." Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, and Samuel Ruichardson attempted the
comic form. Yet what they wrote were true novels, not epics, and there are differences.
#The_Epic
#Comic_Epic
Sidelight: Homer, the author of The Iliad and The Odyssey, is sometimes referred to as the
"Father of Epic Poetry." Based on the conventions he established, classical epics began with
an argument and an invocation to a guiding spirit, then started the narrative in medias res. In
modern use, the term, "epic," is generally applied to all lengthy works on matters of great
importance. The Rhapsodoi, professional reciters, memorized his work and passed it on by
word of mouth as part of an oral tradition.
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This will clear two question, Paradise Lost as an epic and Rape of the Lock as mock epic