Famous People In Literature
Homer (#103)
Homer was considered the greatest authority on poetry, morals, religion, and philosophy in his day. Later, he has been considered the founder of classical and European literature. However, it is argued even now whether there actually was a legendary ancient Greek poet named Homer let alone if he is the author of the Iliad and the Odyssey. [7 minutes]
Information For Teachers
- Grade Levels
- 9-12
- Curricular Areas
- Literacy & Languages
- Series Length
- 12 episodes
- Average Episode Length
- 7 minutes
- Record Rights
- Recording/duplication allowed as long as IPTV broadcasts the series. If you miss the broadcast, contact your AEA for copies.
Visit the IPTV Education website to access timely, relevant resources for your classroom.
Series Description: Their titles include novelist, playwright, poet and essayist. But they are also known as social activist, pacifist, reformer, human rights activist and humorist. Famous People in Literature examines literary giants who left a legacy of works that remain required reading in the classroom. Their writings were often a vivid depiction of everyday life and attitudes of the era. Each program in the series explores the most historic developments, significant contributions, important benchmarks and major turning points during these incredible lives.
All Upcoming Episodes
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Victor Hugo (#104)
Victor Hugo was not only a great writer, poet and playwright; he was also a political activist. He was not beyond critiquing the French King in his plays. And his support of democratic reforms... [7 minutes]
- Mon, May 27, 10:23 PM on IPTV Learns
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Robert Louis Stevenson (#108)
Tortured by lung disease most of his life, Robert Louis Stevenson found creativity in his solitude, which helped write Treasure Island and Jekyll and Hyde. He wrote numerous historical novels too. [7 minutes]
- Tue, May 28, 10:23 PM on IPTV Learns
Past Episodes
These episodes of Famous People In Literature aired in the last few months on Iowa Public Television.