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Mythology is a key feature of human culture around the globe and one through which key experiences are enshrined. This course focuses on the Graeco-Roman, Egyptian, and Near Eastern mythologies and approaches them from a comparative perspective (in particular Celtic, Germanic, Norse, and North-American myths).
No previous knowledge of the subject is assumed.
Each class will consist of an opening lecture, highlighting important themes, setting the stories in their cultural context, and explaining that week’s approach to myth. The lecture will feature a PowerPoint presentation demonstrating the presence in text and artefact of that week’s motif across various cultures. The second half of each class will focus on applying a specific approach to the myths under discussion.
Week 1 What Is a Myth? Myths, Legends, Folktales, and Fairy tales
Introduction to different concepts of myth (legends, folklore, fairy tales, etc., but also a fanciful story or downright fallacy), mythology, and mythography; principal resources for studying myth. Practical exemplification through pyramids in South-, Meso-, and North America, Africa, the Near East, Asia, as well as some European ones. In addition, we will look at a passage from George Buchanan’s History of Scotland (1582), which explains how the nation Scotland came to be (and why it is the best country in the world).
Week 2 Psychoanalytic Approaches: All in the Mind? Motifs: ‘Battle in Heaven’ and ‘Birth of the Cosmos’
Psychoanalytical approaches to myth, including Freud’s famous Oedipal complex and Jung’s transcultural archetypes.
In preparation students will study the motif of sons displacing their fathers: Oedipus and Laius [Greek], Baal and Dagan or El [Canaanite], Zeus and Kronos/Jupiter and Saturn, Kronos and Ouranos [Greek/Roman], Osiris and Horus, Seth and Horus [Egypt], Alalu and Anu, Anu and Kumarbi [Hittite].
Week 3 Historical Approaches I: Archaeology and Historicism. Motifs: ‘Giants and Kings’
In class we will look how scholars have tied myths to a historical context, particularly archaeological sites. Examples include interpretations of modern archaeologists and philologists: Heinrich Schliemann at Mycenae and Troy, Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Möllendorff at Athens and Thebes, Sir Arthur Evans at Crete.
In preparation students will study the motif of battles between (one-eyed) giants and king-figures: Odysseus versus Polyphemus [Greek], Lugh Lamhfada versus Balor (Balar) [Irish], David versus Goliath [Hebrew], Sinbad versus the anonymous giant [Arab], Thor and Hrungnir [Norse]; Gilgamesh (and Enkidu) versus Humbaba [Sumerian/Akkadian].
Week 4 Historical Approaches II: Anthropology (Ritualism and Structuralism). Motifs: Fertility Myths (Earth Mother; Death and Resurrection)
The anthropological approach: myth is a reflection of the lived experience of a culture, including its customs, rituals, and general beliefs.
In preparation students will study fertility myths: (1) the Earth Mother: Demeter/Ceres [Greek/Roman], the Corn Mother [Native North American], (2) death and resurrection: Demeter and Persephone/Ceres and Proserpina [Greek/Roman] versus Ninhursag and Inanna/Ishtar [Mesopotamian] and Anat/Astarte [Canaanite]; Adonis, Hyacinthus, Hylas, Linus, Narcissus [Near Eastern/Greek/Roman].
Week 5 Socio-Biological Approaches: All in the Family. Motifs: ‘Wicked Stepmother’, ‘Stealing Women’, ‘Twins Good and Bad’
Following scientists such as Charles Darwin (evolution theory) and Richard Dawkins (genetics) several scholars have taken to a socio-biological approach to myth (notably Walter Burkert); general conclusion to the course.
Students will prepare by reading myths focused on family matters such as: (1) the ‘wicked stepmother’ motif ‘stealing of women’ motif and ‘twins motif’.
Discussion-based classes, with an introductory lecture in every session. In preparation for each class, students will study a number of texts from various cultures and periods arranged around a central theme or motif. Each class begins with an introductory lecture explaining a particular scholarly approach to myth; the second half of the class will focus on applying that approach to the texts read beforehand.
Intended learning outcomes
By the end of this course, students should be able to:
Transferable skills
Essential
Essential readings will be provided by the course tutor.
Recommended further reading:
Csapo, E., 2005. Theories of Mythology. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Leeming, D., 2005. The Oxford Companion to World Mythology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Lincoln, B., 1999. Theorizing Myth: Narrative, Ideology, and Scholarship. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Von Hendy, A., 2002. The Modern Construction of Myth. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
Texts in translation:
http://www.gutenberg.org/ (accessed 2-3-2016)
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/ (accessed 2-3-2016)
http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/folktexts.html (by D.L. Ashliman, accessed 2-3-2016)
Further resources, such as encyclopaedias and text corpora, collected here: http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/folklinks.html (by D.L. Ashliman, accessed 2-3-2016)
Class handouts will be provided, along with key texts to be read.
If you have questions regarding the course or enrolment, please contact COL Reception at Paterson's Land by email COL@ed.ac.uk or by phone 0131 650 4400.
If you have a disability, learning difficulty or health condition which may affect your studies, please let us know by ticking the 'specific support needs' box on your course application form. This will allow us to make appropriate adjustments in advance and in accordance with your rights under the Equality Act 2010. For more information please visit the Student Support section of our website.