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THE MESSAGE OF THE MYTH

(Joseph Campbell. The Power of Myth)

(David Adams Leeming. The World of Myth)

 

LESSON 2. The aim of the lesson is to teach you to formulate the value of an abstract phenomenon.

 

1. In common parlance, a myth is an “old wives’ tale,” a generally accepted belief unsubstantiated by fact. Thus, it is a myth that professors are absent-minded or that women are intuitive rather than rational. We also classify as myths the stories of gods and heroes of cults in which we do not believe, tales that once had religious significance. The stories of the exploits of Zeus and Hera, Theseus, Perseus, and Odysseus are in this sense myths. Collections of the myths of particular cultures are called mythologies: the exploits of the characters just mentioned form parts of Greek mythology; the stories of Osiris and Isis are part of Egyptian mythology. We also use the word “mythology” to refer to the academic field concerned with the study of myths and mythologies. We can also speak of myth as an abstract reality, like religion or science.

Four types of myths serve as the organizing principle: cosmic myths, theistic myths, hero myths, and place and object myths. Cosmic myths are concerned with the great facts of existence (e.g., the Creation, the Flood, the apocalypse). The theistic myths involve cultural hierarchies (e.g., the Twelve Olympians, the Egyptian Gods). Hero myths, perhaps the best known, are stories dealing with individuals (e.g., Achilles, Odysseus, Jesus, Moses). Place and object myths concern either mythical places (e.g., Atlantis, the Labyrinth) or objects (e.g., King Arthor’s sword, the Golden Fleece).

a) What could have been the reasons for creating myths of each type?

b) Why do we read them now?

 

 

2. The English word “myth” is derived from the Greek mythos, meaning word or story. Human beings have traditionally used stories to describe or explain things they could not explain otherwise. Ancient myths were stories by means of which our forebears were able to assimilate the mysteries that occurred around and within them. In this sense, myth is related to metaphor, in which an object or event is compared to an apparently dissimilar object or event in such a way as to make its otherwise inexplicable essence clear. In short, both as story and as extended metaphor, myth is the direct ancestor of what we think of today as literature. The meaning of myths, like the meaning if any literature, is, as Northorp Frye has said, “inside them, in the implications of their incidents” (Fables of Identity).

But in its explanatory or etiological aspect myth is also a form of history, philosophy, theology, or science. Myths helped early societies understand such phenomena as the movement of the sun across the sky and the changing of the seasons… Myths also served as the basis for rituals by which the ways of humanity and those of nature could be psychologically reconciled. Many of these myths and rituals are still operative in the world’s religions.



World mythology, considered as a whole, is the eternal story of humanity’s quest for self-fulfillment in the face of entropy, the universal tendency towards disorder.

What definitions of myth does Joseph Campbell give in the program? Explain their essence.

 

3. Translate into good Russian (to be done at home and handed in!!!) and be ready for back translation in class:

The connection between dreams and myths is crucial for a proper understanding of the significance of the latter. An assumption of modern psychology popular at the turn of the century was that dreams are a symbolic language by which information about the dreamer is conveyed. More specifically, with the help of an analyst – a sort of modern shaman – the individual can find reflected in dreams messages drawn from the inner self, the self buried beneath the debris of childhood training, adult repression, and mental prejudice. When the dreams of an individual are studied as a whole, a pattern – a personal mythology – emerges. When the dreams of many individuals are compared, a universal dream language, a language of dream symbols, takes form.

Like the myths of an individual, the myths of a given group are created unconsciously, as it were. Myths are anonymous, they exist only as elements embodied in a tradition, they develop on their own, they come from “nowhere.” Yet few anthropologists would deny that to read a culture’s myths is to gleam information about that culture – about its inner identity, hidden beneath the mask of its everyday concerns. To go one step further, when we study the world’s mythologies and discover the archetypal patterns (also common to our individual dreams) that essentially unite those mythologies, we study what we might reasonably call the dreams of humankind, in which we find information about the nature of humanity itself. In a real sense, the world reveals its inner self through its common mythology.

 

4. As we explore the world of myth, we should remember that we are journeying not through a maze of falsehoods but through a marvelous world of metaphor that breathes life into the essential human story: the story of the relationship between the known and the unknown, both around and within us, the story of the search for identity in the context of the universal struggle between order and chaos.

In the Western world, myths have traditionally been tales of pagan (i.e., non-Judeo-Christian) religions. We speak of Egyptian and Greek myths and sometimes of Hindu and Buddhist myths. Yet if “myth” has always implied falsehood, if we have not believed in Zeus or the Golden fleece, we have accepted the mythical tales of cultures we value – especially Greco-Roman culture – as somehow important and worth teaching out children.

What purposes do myths serve?

 

5. In recent times we have gradually broadened our understanding of myth. Psychologists, linguists, and anthropologists have taken us beyond an appreciation of myth as primitive literature, science, or history to a realization of their importance in our own lives today. When we study mythology now, we tend to concern ourselves with basic assumptions that define a person, a family, or a culture – with the informing reality that resides at the center of being. We find ourselves talking not only about pagan tales but also about national, religious, and aesthetic essences. In other words, we have come to think of myths as conveyors of information rather than odd examples of pagan superstition, and we have learned that the mythic tales of particular cultures are masks for a larger, less tangible mythic substructure that we all share.

Are new myths emerging today? Provide examples.

 

6. Final discussion:

a) Write out a set of quotations from the program “The Message of the Myth” that might generate a discussion and be ready to comment upon them.

b) What ideas expressed by Joseph Campbell seemed illuminating/ astounding/

contradictory to you?

 


Date: 2015-01-29; view: 2467


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