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Quiz about Heroes and MockHeroes
Quiz about Heroes and MockHeroes

Heroes and Mock-Heroes Trivia Quiz


Since the beginning of Western literature, heroic and mock-heroic character types have loomed large the canon. See how well you know these types as they have popped up over the millennia.

A multiple-choice quiz by DaedalusLex. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
DaedalusLex
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
282,742
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
691
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Which is not considered an epic hero? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Which of these virtues least fits the heroic ethic of the great epic poems? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Match the form of heroism to its exemplar.

1) Epic Hero
2) Tragic Hero
3) Philosopher Hero
4) Sentimental Hero
Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Which classification of hero best suits Nicholas, of Chaucer's "Miller's Tale"? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Which is considered the great Protestant epic of the Christian age? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. What contemporary of Shakespeare created a mock-heroic character who would inspire many writers in the 17th-18th century Age of Satire? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. What makes Alexander Pope's "The Rape of the Lock" a mock-heroic poem? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. What mock-heroic character feels so deflated that he mutters in self-disgust: "I should have been a pair of ragged claws / Scuttling across the floors of silent seas." Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Which best describes James Joyce's "Ulysses"? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Marlon Brando plays the role of Kurtz in "Apocalypse Now." Which of the following statements most accurately fits Brando's character into the heroic/mock-heroic schema? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Which is not considered an epic hero?

Answer: King Lear

Odysseus is the classic epic hero from the Greek period, Aeneas from the Roman period, and Beowulf from the Anglo-Saxon period. Shakespeare's King Lear is a tragic, not an epic, hero. The epic is panoramic in scope, usually covering lots of geography and many years, and its hero is the virtually flawless exemplar of the ideals of his culture. Tragedy is narrower in scope and its hero, though great in stature like the epic hero, has some flaw that causes him to fall from the highest heights to the lowest depths.
2. Which of these virtues least fits the heroic ethic of the great epic poems?

Answer: Forgiveness of those who offend

Forgiveness may be a great virtue in the Christian era, but in the likes of Homer's "The Odyssey," the ability to exact revenge against offenders is the more celebrated trait. The other three virtues form part of the "paste" that holds the heroic order together.
3. Match the form of heroism to its exemplar. 1) Epic Hero 2) Tragic Hero 3) Philosopher Hero 4) Sentimental Hero

Answer: Odysseus (1), Oedipus (2), Plato's Socrates (3), Sterne's Yorick (4)

Homer's Odysseus, Sophocles's Oedipus, Plato's Socrates, and Laurence Sterne's Yorick (who appears in both "Tristram Shandy" and "A Sentimental Journey") are pat representatives of the respective categories. The other answers all have one or more assignments that are unambiguously false; e.g., neither Tom Jones nor Gulliver can ever fit the "tragic hero" mold, nor can Hamlet be considered by any stretch an epic hero.
4. Which classification of hero best suits Nicholas, of Chaucer's "Miller's Tale"?

Answer: Folk hero

Nicholas is the quintessential folk hero. He hails from the lower classes (unlike the standard tragic or epic heroes), wins not by prowess or chivalric virtues but by cleverness, and generally brings things to a comic conclusion. The absurd hero, keyed to an existentialist world view, is one who chooses to act morally with the full knowledge that it is meaningless to do so.

The tragic hero would require an aristocratic pedigree, a crucial flaw or misunderstanding, and a tragic ending, none of which apply to Nicholas. Nicholas also lacks the sublime passion and high seriousness of the Byronic hero.
5. Which is considered the great Protestant epic of the Christian age?

Answer: John Milton's "Paradise Lost"

Dante's "Divine Comedy" is considered the great Catholic epic and Milton's "Paradise Lost" the great Protestant epic of the Christian era. "Othello" and "Gargantua and Pantagruel" are tragedy and comedy, respectively, neither epics nor concerned in the same way as Dante and Milton with Christian ideals.
6. What contemporary of Shakespeare created a mock-heroic character who would inspire many writers in the 17th-18th century Age of Satire?

Answer: Miguel de Cervantes

Cervantes, who like Shakespeare died in 1616, created Don Quixote, a great inspiration to later satirists and dabblers in the mock-heroic. Marlowe was a contemporary of Shakespeare with a significant body of dramatic works but he was not known for comedy or mock-heroics. Queen Elizabeth was a contemporary of Shakespeare but also otherwise preoccupied. Joyce came 300 years later.
7. What makes Alexander Pope's "The Rape of the Lock" a mock-heroic poem?

Answer: It uses the Homeric apparatus to satirize the British elite.

Pope's early 18th-century poem certainly uses the language of heroic poetry and certainly does not mock Homer's heroes, whom were held in high esteem by Pope and his contemporaries. He encases the British upper crust in the Homeric apparatus to show how comparatively frivolous these people are -- the best they can do for a "heroic" act is when the hero boldly snips a lock of hair from the head of the haughty coquette.
8. What mock-heroic character feels so deflated that he mutters in self-disgust: "I should have been a pair of ragged claws / Scuttling across the floors of silent seas."

Answer: T. S. Eliot's J. Alfred Prufrock

Pope's Tibbald and Dryden's Mac Flecknoe indeed star in mock-heroic poems, but these poems appear two hundred years before Eliot's poem and (unlike the sample) are written in the heroic couplets typical of the period. Burroughs's narrator is not mock-heroic in any ordinary sense and does not evince the kind of self-loathing expressed in these lines.
9. Which best describes James Joyce's "Ulysses"?

Answer: Leopold Bloom is a mock-hero in that he is deliverer of neither himself nor his culture.

Joyce's "Ulysses" mimics the structure of "The Odyssey" (not "The Iliad"), but Joyce's Bloom falls spectacularly short of Homer's epic hero.
10. Marlon Brando plays the role of Kurtz in "Apocalypse Now." Which of the following statements most accurately fits Brando's character into the heroic/mock-heroic schema?

Answer: Brando's character is heroic in stature but mock-heroic in that he turns conventionally heroic values upside down.

Brando's Kurtz is a figure of tremendous power and charisma -- potentially heroic qualities -- but he has clearly drifted to the dark side. If Brando brings any residue into the film by virtue of his long and storied career, it is the aura of strong masculinity and moral ambiguity that he had developed through earlier roles.

Although outwardly a less imposing figure than Kurtz, Captain Willard (Martin Sheen) is the real hero, at least structurally, as it is he who rises through all manner of danger to complete the heroic task.
Source: Author DaedalusLex

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