Reading 3
Reading 3
Reading 3
Youshould spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
1. Until the last tick of history's clock, cultural transmission meant oral transmission and poetry, passed
from mouth to ear, was the principal medium of moving information across space and from one
generation to the next. Oral poetry was not simply a way of telling lovely or important stories, or of
flexing the imagination. It was, argues the classicist Eric Havelock, a "massive repository of useful
knowledge, a sort of encyclopedia of ethics, politics, history and technology which the effective citizen
was required to learn as the core of his educational equipment''. The great oral works transmitted a
shared cultural heritage, held in common not on bookshelves, but in brains. In India, an entire class of
priests was charged with memorizing the Vedas with perfect fidelity. In pre-Islamic Arabia, people
known as Rawis were often attached to poets as official memorizers. The Buddha's teachings were
passed down in an unbroken chain of oral tradition for four centuries until they were committed to
writing in Sri Lanka in the first century B.C.
2. The most famous of the Western tradition's oral works, and the first to have been systematically
studied, were Homer's Odyssey and Iliad. These two poems - possibly the first to have been written
down in the Greek alphabet - had long been held up as literary archetypes. However, even as they
were celebrated as the models to which all literature should aspire, Homer's masterworks had also long
been the source of scholarly unease. The earliest modern critics sensed that they were somehow
qualitatively different from everything that came after - even a little strange. For one thing, both
poems were oddly repetitive in the way they referred to characters. Odysseus was always"clever
Odysseus''. Dawn was always "rosy-fingered''. Why would someone write that? Sometimes the
epithets seemed completely off-key. Why call the murderer of Agamemnon "blameless Aegisthos"?
Why refer to "swift-footed Achilles" even when he was sitting down? Or to "laughing Aphrodite" even
when she was in tears? In terms of both structure and theme, the Odyssey and Iliad were also oddly
formulaic, to the point of predictability. The same narrative units - gathering armies, heroic shields,
challenges between rivals - pop up again and again, only with different characters and different
circumstances. In the context of such finely spun, deliberate masterpieces, these quirks* seemed hard
to explain.
3. At the heart of the unease about these earliest works of literature were two fundamental questions:
first, how could Greek literature have been born ex nihilo* with two masterpieces? Surely a few
less perfect stories must have come before, and yet these two were among the first on record. And
second, who exactly was their author? Or was it authors? There were no historical records of
Homer, and no trustworthy biography of the man exists beyond a few self-referential hints embedded
in the texts themselves
4. Jean-Jacques Rousseau was one of the first modern critics to suggest that Homer might not have
been an author in the contemporary sense of a single person who sat down and wrote a story and
then published it for others to read. In his 1781 Essay on the Origin of Languages, the Swiss
philosopher suggested that the Odyssey and Iliad might have been "written only in men's
memories. Somewhat later they were laboriously collected in writing" - though that was about as
far as his enquiry into the matter went.
5. In 1795, the German philologist Friedrich August Wolf argued for the first time that not only were
Homer's works not written down by Homer, but they weren't even by Homer. They were, rather, a
loose collection of songs transmitted by generations of Greek bards*, and only redacted* in their
present form at some later date. In 1920,an eighteen-year-old scholar named Milman Parry took up
the question of Homeric authorship as his Master's thesis at the University of California, Berkeley.
He suggested that the reason Homer's epics seemed unlike other literature was because they were
unlike other literature. Parry had discovered what Wood and Wolf had missed: the evidence that the
poems had been transmitted orally was right there in the text itself. All those stylistic quirks,
including the formulaic and recurring plot elements and the bizarrely repetitive epithets - "clever
Odysseus" and "gray-eyed Athena" - that had always perplexed readers were actually like
thumbprints left by a potter: material evidence of how the poems had been crafted. They were
mnemonic* aids that helped the bard(s) fit the meter and pattern of the line, and remember the
essence of the poems.
6. The greatest author of antiquity was actually, Parry argued, just "one of a long tradition of oral poets
that ... composed wholly without the aid of writing". Parry realised that if you were setting out to create
memorable poems, the Odyssey and the Iliad were exactly the kind of poems you'd create. It's said that
clichés* are the worst sin a writer can commit, but to an oral bard, they were essential.The very reason
that cliches so easily seep into our speech and writing - their insidious memorability - is exactly why
they played such an important role in oral storytelling. The principles that the oral bards discovered as
they sharpened their stories through telling and retelling were the same mnemonic principles that
psychologists rediscovered when they began conducting their first scientific experiments on memory
around the turn of the twentieth century. Words that rhyme are much more memorable than words that
don't, and concrete nouns are easier to remember than abstract ones. Finding patterns and structure in
information is how our brains extract meaning from the world, and putting words to music and rhyme is
a way of adding extra levels of pattern and structure to language.
Glossary
quirk: behaviour or a habit which seems to be unique to one person
ex nihilo: a Latin phrase used to express the idea of 'creation out of nothing'
bard: a person who composed and recited long, heroic poems
redacted: published
mnemonic: a sentence or short poem used for helping someone to remember something
cliché: a phrase or idea that is unoriginal because people use it very frequently