Is it even taught in the US? π€
I didnβt read it for school. I just liked reading and had this gnarly book featuring all the greatest hits of Greek mythology growing up.
Went to a mediocre high school in the US, and I had an English/writing course where the only materials were the Aeneid, Illiad, Odyssey, and Mythology by Edith Hamilton.
My 10th grade English class studied a small section of it, like one self contained story.
This is what we did as well, in AP English. We also did Beowulf. We also had to read the first fucking Harry Potter book because the teacher liked Harry Potter. Imagine a group of the highest achieving 17 and 18 year olds out of 600 students their age writing papers about a book written for 10 year olds.
Such a waste of time. We got college credit for this bullshit. Iβm still mad about it.
I feel like thereβs a way to do it that doesnβt suck - an examination of the book WRT the heroβs journey, picking out elements borrowed from English literary tradition to see how theyβre deployed v. original texts, etc.
Real talk though, I feel it comes from a place of not knowing how to appeal to young people. I ran into the very same thing once when asked about course ideas for first year students coming directly from high school. I had no idea (still donβt) what would appeal to kids, so I thought a course that used Harry Potter as a keystone text (everybody being familiar, using it as a bridge to more traditional lit) could work. But as I said the words I knew 18 year old me wouldβve hated that, soooβ¦
We had to do skits. Broke it down by chapters and each group did like a page or two. I was the son in the scene where heβs working with his dad in disguise right when Odysseus returns home and sees all the other guys trying to bang his wife