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Ways of Interpreting Myth

Ways of Interpreting Myth . Modified by RL Elias from a presentation by T. Sienkewicz, Monmouth College. Ancient Ways of Viewing Myth. Archaic 750-480 B.C. Classical 480-323 B.C. Hellenistic 323-146 B.C. Myth as Venerable Tradition Questioning of Myths (Rationality) Myths as Allegory

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Ways of Interpreting Myth

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  1. Ways of Interpreting Myth Modified by RL Elias from a presentation by T. Sienkewicz, Monmouth College

  2. Ancient Ways of Viewing Myth Archaic 750-480 B.C. Classical 480-323 B.C. Hellenistic 323-146 B.C. Myth as Venerable Tradition Questioning of Myths (Rationality) Myths as Allegory Myths as Instructive Models Myths as Inaccurate Myths of Questionable Morality Myths as Dangerous Gods as Deified Heroes and Kings Xenophanes Heraclitus Aeschylus Euripides Socrates Plato Euhemerus Diodorus

  3. Xenophanes of Colophonc.570 B.C. Questioned the Anthropomorphism of the Gods #170 But mortals consider that the gods are born, and that they have clothes and speech and bodies like their own. #171 The Ethiopians say that their gods are snub- nosed and black, the Thracians that theirs have light blue eyes and red hair. #172 But if cattle and horses or lions had hands, or were able to draw with their hands and do the works that men can do, horses would draw the forms of gods like horses, and cattle like cattle, and they would make their bodies such as they each had themselves.

  4. Myths as Allegory Theagenes of Rhegium (525 B.C.) Gods as symbols of human qualities; e.g., Athena = wisdom Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (c.500-428 B.C.) The misdeeds of the gods are intended to illustrate evil and teach virtue.

  5. Myths as Instructive Models Aeschylus (c.525-456 B.C.) used myth to teach Athenians about the gods and the their role in the civic life of Athens. Orestes at trial with Apollo, Athena, and the Erinyes The Erinyes of Clytaemnestra pursue Orestes.Beside Athena, who presides the court, sits Apollo.

  6. Myths as DangerousPlato Banishes Poetry (=Myths) from his Ideal Republic In Republic Book X Socrates banishes poets from the city as unwholesome and dangerous because: • The poets pretend to know all sorts of things, but they really know nothing at all. The things they deal with cannot be known: they are images, far removed from what is most real. By presenting scenes so far removed from the truth poets, pervert souls, turning them away from the most real toward the least. • Worse, the images the poets portray do not imitate the good part of the soul. The rational part of the soul is quiet, stable, and not easy to imitate or understand. Poets imitate the worst parts—the inclinations that make characters easily excitable and colorful. Poetry naturally appeals to the worst parts of souls and arouses, nourishes, and strengthens this base elements while diverting energy from the rational part • Poetry corrupts even the best souls. It deceives us into sympathizing with those who grieve excessively, who lust inappropriately, who laugh at base things. It even goads us into feeling these base emotions vicariously. We think there is no shame in indulging these emotions because we are indulging them with respect to a fictional character and not with respect to our own lives.

  7. Euhemerism Euhemerus of Messene, late 4th c. BCE: The gods are actually historical figures deified after death. From Diodorus Siculus: Now Euhemerus, who was a friend of King Cassander [of Macedonia (301 to 297 B.C.)] and was required by him to perform certain affairs of state and to make a great journey abroad, says that he traveled southward as far as the [Indian] ocean; for setting sail from Arabia he voyaged through the ocean for a considerable number of days and was carried to the shore of some islands in the sea, one of which bore the name of Panachaea. On this island he saw the Panachaeans who dwell there, who excel in piety and honor the gods with the most magnificent sacrifices and with remarkable votive offerings of silver and gold.... There is also on the island, situated on an exceedingly high hill, a sanctuary of Zeus, which was established by him during the time when he was king of all the inhabited world and was still in the company of men. And in the temple there is a stele of gold on which is inscribed in summary, in the writing employed by the Panchaeans, the deeds of Ouranos and Kronos and Zeus.

  8. Modern Interpretations of Myth Externalist Theories: Myths as products of the environment (social, political, etc.) or as explanations of natural phenomena. Internalist Theories: Myths as products of the mind or as reflections of the structure of mind.

  9. Externalist Theories:Myths as Products of the Environment • Myths as Aetiology • Nature Myths • Myths as Rituals • Charter Myths

  10. Myths as Aetiology • myth as explanation of the origin of things • myth as primitive science • Europa (eponymous hero) • Creation myths • Arachne • Apollo as source of plague Athena and Arachne in Ovid’s Metamorphoses

  11. F. Max MüllerNature Myths Founder of the social scientific study of religion Comparative approach: Study of Vedic peoples of ancient India applied to myths of other cultures (Greece and Rome) For Müller, the culture of the Vedic peoples represented a form of nature worship, an idea clearly influenced by Romanticism Solar mythology Max Müller (1823-1900)

  12. Zeus as the Sky • Dyaus pitr Sanskrit • Dyaus = “he who shines” • pitr = father • Zeus pater Greek • Jupiter Latin • Tiu Vater Teutonic (German) Indo-European

  13. Myths as Ritual • Sir James Frazer’ The Golden Bough (1890-1915) • myths as byproducts of ritual enactments that survive after the ritual is no longer practiced. A “decay of language” • stories to explain religious ceremonies

  14. Charter Myths Myths authorize and validate current social customs and institutions. Bronsilaw Malinowski (1884-1942)

  15. Internalist Theories: Myths as Products of the Mind Individual Mind Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) Laistner (1889) All monsters of myth originated in nightmares. Roheim (1952) disguised version of the Oedipus complex Collective Mind Carl Jung (1875-1961) Joseph Campbell (1904-1987)

  16. Structuralism • Claude Lévi-Strauss (1908-2010) • Jean-Paul Vernant • Pierre Vidal-Naquet

  17. Claude Lévi-Strauss (1908-2010) • myth reflects the mind's binary organization • humans tend to see world as reflection of their own physical and cerebral structure ( two hands, eyes, legs, etc.) • left/right, raw,/cooked, pleasure/pain • myth deals with the perception and reconciliation of these opposites • mediation of contradictions

  18. Narratology • Vladimir Propp (1895-1970) • A formalist approach . . . concerned with HOW a myth/folktale/etc. is put together • Propp argued that all fairy tales were constructed of certain plot elements, which he called functions, and that these elements consistently occurred in a uniform sequence. • Based on a study of one hundred folk tales, Propp devised a list of thirty-one generic functions, proposing that they encompassed all of the plot components from which fairy tales were constructed.

  19. Feminist Approaches to Myth Marija Gimbutas (1921-1994) Marija Gimbutas was an archaeologist with a scholarly background in folklore and linguistics, making her uniquely qualified to synthesize information from science and myth into a controversial theory of a Goddess-based culture in prehistoric Europe. Joseph Campbell said that, if her work had been available to him, he would have held very different views about the archetypes of the female Divine in world mythology. Primacy of Matriarchy

  20. Which theory is right?

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