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Myth

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'Urban myths' Myth. Multiple meanings = ambiguity = 'Traditional' ... urban myth, urban legend = Fabrication, defiance of facts. eg. myth of Aryan supremacy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Myth


1
Myth
  • 22.11.2006

2
  • 6.12
  • Essay II deadline (1200)
  • (not 29.11)
  • 13.12
  • Essay II feedback
  • 10. Lecture Religious movements cargo cults
  • Thu 14.12, 10-12 - ????

3
Readings
  • Lévi-Strauss, C. 1955. The Structural Study of
    Myth. In The Journal of American Folklore LXVII
    428-44 (Reprinted in Lessa and Vogt)
  • Dundes, A. 1962. Earth-Diver Creation of the
    Mythopoeic Male. In American Anthropologist LXIV
    1032-51. (Reprinted in Lessa and Vogt)

4
Discussion topics
  • General
  • Anthropological definitions
  • Myth as a story
  • Myth vs history
  • Myth vs folktale, legend
  • Anthropological approaches to myth
  • Rationalist
  • Functionalist
  • Psychonalytical
  • Structuralist
  • Contemporary studies
  • Urban myths

5
Myth
  • Multiple meanings ambiguity
  • Traditional story
  • Myth legend, folktale
  • Erroneous belief
  • eg. urban myth, urban legend
  • Fabrication, defiance of facts
  • eg. myth of Aryan supremacy
  • Sacred story
  • Closest to common anthropological understanding

6
Mythos
  • Mythos Myth
  • Mythos
  • "utterance," "speech," or "story"
  • an ambiguous term
  • Eg. Odyssey
  • Odysseus' son Telemachus
  • tells his mother Penelope to leave mythos to men
  • "public debate and discussion"
  • asks Nestor to tell him whatever mythos he may
    have heard of his missing father
  • "story," "tale"

7
Mythos
  • Eg. Iliad
  • Phoenix
  • teaches Achilles to be both a speaker of mythos
    and a doer of deeds
  • mythos "word"
  • Eg. Electra
  • Electra
  • promises to tell her husband the whole mythos
  • Mythos true story
  • Eg. Herodotus (Histories)
  • recounts a story (mythos) about Heracles which
    has "no basis in fact
  • Mythos false story

8
Anthropological definitions
  • Frazer
  • "By myths I understand mistaken explanations of
    phenomena, whether of human life or of external
    nature."
  • Rose
  • "We may then define myth proper as the result of
    the working of naïve imagination upon the facts
    of experience."

9
Anthropological definitions
  • Eliade
  • Myths narrate a sacred history they relate
    an event that took place in primordial Time, the
    fabled time of beginnings.
  • Keesing
  • "Myths are accounts about how the world came to
    be the way it is, about a super-ordinary realm of
    events before or behind the experienced natural
    world they are accounts that are believed to be
    true and in some sense sacred."
  • Needham
  • "Myths are timeless stories that describe the
    origin of something - the world, a natural
    phenomenon or some aspect of culture and confront
    us with at least one event or situation which is
    physically or humanly impossible."

10
Anthropological definitions
  • Malinowski
  • Myths are pragmatic charters of primitive
    faith and moral wisdom.
  • Burkert
  • Myths are traditional tales with secondary,
    partial reference to something of collective
    importance.
  • Lincoln
  • Mythology is ideology in narrative form.

11
Myth as a story
  • Two ways of conceptualisation
  • Myth ? history
  • Myth ? history
  • Myth vs history
  • Myth vs legend, folktale
  • Based on comparison of variour criteria
  • fictionality
  • time period
  • setting
  • religious importance
  • main characters

12
Myth ? history
  • Myths poor versions of history
  • Originally depictions of historical events
  • With time
  • imbued with symbolic meaning
  • transformed, shifted in time or place, reversed
  • Dynamics of memory about an event
  • 'dispassionate account' 'legendary occurrence'
    'mythical status'
  • account takes on a life of its own
  • the facts of the original event have become
    irrelevant

13
Myth vs history
  • Distinctive worldview
  • Based on myth cyclical
  • Based on history linear
  • Mythical thought vs rational, scientific
    thought
  • Goody (literate vs illiterate societies)
  • Lévi-Strauss (hot vs cold societies)
  • Sahlins (Hawaiians vs English)
  • Todorov (Aztecs vs Spaniards)

14
Myth vs folktale and legend
  • Myth, folktale and legend folklore
  • William Bascom
  • The Forms of Folklore  Prose Narratives (1975)
  • Donna Rosenberg
  • Folklore, Myth, and Legends A World Perspective
    (1996)
  • Distinction between folktale, myth and legend
  • fictionality
  • time period
  • setting
  • religious importance
  • main characters

15
Myth vs folktale and legend
  • Myths
  • sacred stories and narratives
  • occurred in the remote past
  • non-humans (gods, monsters) as the principal
    characters

16
Recurring themes in myths
  • Creation myths cosmogonic myths
  • creation of universe, life and/or humanity
  • creation of order from primordial chaos
  • creation ex nihilo
  • Big Bang theory as a creation myth?
  • Trickster myths
  • tricks played by gods or heroes
  • sometimes maliciously
  • usually with ultimately positive intentions

17
Recurring themes in myths
  • Cataclysmic / destruction myths
  • floods
  • seasonal death and rebirth
  • other
  • origin of fire
  • coming millennium
  • relations between the living and the dead
  • two approaches
  • Diffusion/ Existence of an original myth
    (Ur-Myth)
  • Common experience of humankind

18
Myth vs folktale and legend
  • Folktales
  • non-sacred fictional stories
  • occur "once upon a time"
  • feature both human and non-human characters
  • Examples
  • Fairy tales
  • Fables

19
Myth vs folktale and legend
  • Legends
  • regarded as true stories
  • primarily about human heroes
  • occurred in the recent past
  • may feature some religious references
  • Example Legends of Odysseus

20
 
21
Study of myths
  • First critical studies of myth Ancient Greeks
  • Plato
  • first to use the word mythologia
  • Euhemerus
  • gods renowned historical figures
  • became deified in time
  • Allegorical interpretations
  • Greek gods moral principles
  • Allegorical truths taken literally
  • Eg. myth of Kronos, who devoured his children,
  • kronos "time, destroys everything

22
Study of myths
  • 19th c
  • Max Müller
  • comparative mythology
  • establishing origin of myth by comparative
    methods
  • debate over the primacy of myth vs ritual in
    religion
  • the myth school vs the ritual school

23
Myth vs ritual debate
  • The myth school
  • Eg. Bachofen, Müller, influenced by German
    idealism
  • Focus Indic Vedas and Indo-European myths
  • Müller
  • European culture closer to Indic than Semitic
    tradition
  • Aryan culture
  • Mythology mind inner forms of religion
  • The study of texts

24
Myth vs ritual debate
  • The ritual school
  • Eg. Durkheim, Robertson Smith, Lévy
  • Focus on rituals of the Hebrew, and the Semites
  • Robertson Smith
  • Earliest religions ritualistic
  • More mythical more developed
  • Eg. Protestantism anti-ritirualistic
  • Rituals behaviour external forms of
    religion
  • Empirical research

25
Antropological approaches to myth
  • Rationalist
  • Eg. 19 c. evolutionists
  • Functionalist
  • Eg. Malinowski
  • Psychoanalytical
  • Eg. Dundes
  • Structuralist
  • Eg. Lévi-Strauss

26
Rationalist approach
  • Myth as a primitive scientific theory
  • rationalizations of the fundamental mysteries of
    life
  • explanations of natural events and forces
  • Eg. creation myths

27
Rationalist approach
  • Evolutionists
  • Eg. Müller
  • Myths explain origins of natural phenomena
    (naturism)
  • Eg. Tylor and Andrew Lang
  • Myth-producing certain stage of savage
    mentality
  • No modern myths (Tylor)
  • Eg. Frazer
  • explanations of origin
  • means by which people make sense of the world
  • Golden Bough myth of the death and regeneration
    of king
  • primitive explanation of natural cycles and
    political life

28
Functionalist approach
  • sociological approach
  • myth and social reality are functionally
    interrelated
  • emphasis on normative and social aspects
  • Literal reading of the myth - influence of Boas
  • Myth as a direct description of subject matter
  • But also focus on what myths do rather than
    say
  • Myths
  • a type of social control
  • teach morality and social behavior
  • ensure stability in a society
  • validate present social relations

29
Functionalist approach
  • Malinowski Myth in Primitive Psychology (1926)
  • To understand myth
  • one has to observe it in its total social context
  • myths
  • assert fundamental moral and social rules
  • confirm and maintain the social state of affairs
  • myth a social charter
  • Malinowskis functionalism charterism
  • myth a practical guide to activities

30
Functionalist approach
  • E.g. Trobriand origin myths
  • explain and validate incest taboos
  • legitimate food taboos
  • justify ranks in society
  • E.g. myth of the flying canoe
  • making a canoe fly with improper magic utter
    failure
  • assertion of proper values, norms and ritual
    behaviour

31
Functionalist approach
  • Malinowski
  • The myth comes into play when rite, ceremony, or
    a social or moral rule demands justification,
    warrant of antiquity, reality, and sanctity
  • myths have an political function
  • means to justify the existing social order
  • By presenting it as sacred or natural
  • "disguised propoganda in the service of those
    in power"

32
Functionalist approach
  • Myth
  • Similar functions in civilised and primitive
    worlds
  • Myth is to the savage what, to a fully believing
    Christian, is the Biblical story of Creating, of
    the Fall, of the Redemption by Christs sacrifice
    on the Cross. As our sacred story lives in our
    ritual, in our morality, as it governs our faith
    and controls our conduct, even so does his myth
    for the savage.

33
Psychoanalytical approach
  • Emphasis on symbolic rather than historical
    aspects of myth
  • Focus on universals irrespective of cultural
    context
  • Freud
  • Mythology psychology projected on the external
    world
  • Myths - symbolic reflections of unconscious and
    repressed fears
  • Myths ? dreams
  • Interpretation of Dreams (1900)
  • Freud Oppenheim Dreams in Folklore (1911)

34
Psychoanalytical approach
  • Roheim
  • Dream-origin of mythology
  • Eg. Creation myths excremental pressure during
    sleep
  • Eg. Flood myths vesical dreams
  • The Gates of Dream (1952)
  • Jung
  • myths are products of the collective unconscious
  • Contain archetypes

35
Psychoanalytical approach
  • Dundes
  • Earth-Diver Creation of the Mythopoeic Male
    (1962)
  • Earth-diver myth
  • The creation of earth from dirt or mud
  • Waters cover earth
  • Various animals dive to bring up sand and mud
  • One animal succeeds
  • mud put on surface of water becomes land
  • widely spread theme especially among Amerindians

36
Psychoanalytical approach
  • Dundes
  • relies on orthodox Freudian theory
  • Two theoretical assumptions
  • (universal) male pregnancy envy
  • desire to give anal/cloakal birth

37
Psychoanalytical approach
  • Numerous cross-cultural examples
  • Genesis
  • Woman born from a man
  • Noah builds a womb-ark
  • Hinduism
  • Ganesh formed from the excrement of his mother
  • Chukchee creation myth
  • Raven defecates and creates the world
  • Cosmic egg myths
  • Spider creation myths

38
Psychoanalytical approach
  • Numerrous cross-cultural examples
  • Clinical data of male fantasies
  • Freud, Jung, Lombroso, etc
  • Nahuatl
  • gold as the excrement of gods
  • teocuitlatl gold
  • teotl god
  • cuitlatl excrement

39
Structuralist approach
  • Emphasis on structure rather than content of myth
  • Myths not necessarily true stories based on facts
  • Focus on the relations between constitutive
    elements of myth
  • Cracking of the myths code
  • Vladimir Propp
  • Morphology of the Folktale (1958)
  • breaking down folktales into narrative units or
    narratemes
  • Russian folktales 31 generic narratemes

40
Structuralist approach
  • Lévi-Strauss
  • Emphasis on universal binary opposites
  • Application of structural linguistics (Saussure)
  • Two ways to study language
  • diachronical / syntagmatic
  • historical development
  • synchronical / paradigmatic
  • components and their interrelations

41
Structuralist approach
  • Lévi-Strauss
  • Structural approach to myth
  • Two seminal essays
  • The Structural Study of Myth (1955)
  • The Story of Asdiwal (1961)
  • The Savage Mind (1962)
  • Mythologiques (1964-72)
  • Etc.

42
Structuralist approach
  • Meaning of the myth
  • not in their manifest content
  • but in the underlying structure
  • beyond and beneath the emic description
  • Myth
  • not a true story based on facts
  • cultural code
  • direct insight into the ways the human mind
    operates
  • underlying structure
  • not evident at the empirical level

43
Structuralist approach
  • Myth
  • To be studied in relation to other myths
  • Myth summation of all its variants
  • No original version of myth, all versions equal
  • transformations (history)
  • Synchronic over diachronic reading
  • Reveals recurring themes and substitutions
  • Makes repetitions meaningful

44
Structuralist approach
  • mythemes
  • minimal meaningful units of the myth
  • arrangable into thematic columns (bundles of
    relations)
  • Eg.
  • 1 2 4 7 8
  • 2 3 4 6 8
  • 1 4 5 7 8
  • 3 4 5
  • 6 8

45
Structuralist approach
  • Reading of the myth
  • Chronological / diachronic reading
  • Rows (top to bottom)
  • Understanding the myth
  • de-chronologized / synchronic
  • columns (left to right like an orchestral score )
  • Reveals a historical structure
  • Retained in additions, translations
  • Correlation of columns
  • reveal contradictions on an ideological level

46
Criticism of structuralist approach
  • False bases
  • structural linguistics
  • challenged by Chomsky
  • cybernetic model of the brain
  • binary computer not a good model for intelligence
  • Decontextualised and arbitrary choice of
    ethnographic material
  • Static nature
  • Wendy Doniger in Myth and Meaning (1995)
  • We must jump off the Lévi-Strausss bus one stop
    before he does. And once we have jumped off, we
    find that we are not there yet. We have to get on
    another bus (theological, psychological), or,
    indeed several buses.

47
Criticism of structuralist approach
  • Douglas
  • Against the butterfly collecting approach in
    the study of myths
  • Importance of context
  • Who tells it?
  • To whom it may concern?
  • On what occasion?
  • Red Riding Hood An Interpretation from
    Anthropology (1995)
  • Childrens vs 19th c French version
  • different routes to the grandmothers house
  • the girl gets to bed with the wolf
  • the wolf and the girl eat parts of the
    grandmother
  • Story as a metaphor of female initiation

48
Monomyth
  • Joseph Campbell The Hero with a Thousand Faces
    (1949)
  • Study of heroic myth
  • Search for a grand theme and unifying theory
    between cultures
  • monomyth
  • a universal pattern that lies beneath all heroic
    myths
  • Three chanracteristic stages of heros journey
  • Departure (separation) Inititation Return
  • a threefold rite of passage
  • Feminist critque (Bowie)
  • Applies to male stories only

49
Contemporary studies
  • Urban legend/myth A type of modern folklore
  • supposedly-true stories
  • circulate by word of mouth / FOAF
  • play on or reflect peoples fears
  • fear of change, new technology, etc.
  • Jan Harold Brunvand
  • The Vanishing Hitchhiker American Urban Legends
    Their Meanings (1981)
  • legends, myths, and folklore also in modern
    societies

50
Urban myth
  • An example of classic urban legend
  • Papal Tiara the pope's crown
  • Vicarius Filii Dei
  • Vicar of the Son of God
  • If numerised 666
  • No clear proofs"
  • d

51
Urban myth
  • Scheper-Hughes Theft of Life The Globalization
    of Organ Stealing Rumours (1996)
  • International trade of organ transplants / body
    parts
  • global rumours of body-snatching
  • Russia organs sold to rich Arabs
  • Sub-Saharan Africa vampires steal organs
  • Italy black ambulance
  • Metaphoric substitutions, the basic story line
    the same
  • Stories more common at times of upheaval and
    crisis
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