Notes on A Short History of Myth.

April 20, 2008 - Leave a Response

Notes on A Short History of Myth by Karen Armstrong.

What is Myth?

  • Nearly always rooted in death
  • Inseparable from ritual
    • ritual required for fully understanding the myth
  • About extremity and transcending everyday experience
  • Shows how we should behave
  • Speaks of a world alongside our own
    • of gods
    • of the dead

Paleolithic Period

  • Everywhen
    • example: Dreamtime
    • a stable backdrop to reality in which myth takes place
  • Lost Paradise/Golden Age myth
  • Everything was sacred; nothing was profane
  • Symbol
    • from Greek, “to throw together”
    • animism
    • nature as symbolic
  • Sky Father
    • sky as…
      • essence of transcendence and otherness
      • numinous
      • dynamic
    • sky becomes personified as Sky Father
      • examples: El, Anu, Ouranos
      • first cause
      • no images, cults, priests, or shrines
      • the “gone away” or “disappeared” god
      • inexpressible
    • prehistoric monotheism
  • Mistress of Animals
    • examples: Artemis, Inuit Mistress of Animals, Catal Huyuk goddess
    • aka the Great Goddess
    • exacts bloody revenge for violation of hunting taboos
    • hunting as sacred rite
    • animal sacrifice
    • animals as relatives, guides
  • Religion as mystery
    • fails if too impersonal
  • Height as divine symbol
    • mountains
    • flight
    • sky
    • tree
      • World Tree
    • myths of ascent
      • examples: Jesus, Mohammed, Elijah, shamans
    • descend to ascend
      • from depths of the earth to the heights of heaven
      • from death to life
  • Hero myth
    • examples: Prometheus, Aeneas, Herakles
  • Logos
    • scientific, rational, pragmatic thought
    • complement of mythos

Neolithic Period

  • Agricultural revolution
    • farming as sacrament
  • Holistic reality
    • ritual replenishing of earth
      • first seeds thrown away
      • first fruits left on crops
    • sex as metaphor of earth’s fertility
      • earth as womb
  • Creation myth
    • people emerging from earth as plants
    • profound identification with place
    • respect for natural rhythms
    • creative force
  • Mother Goddess
    • examples: Ereshkigal, Asherah, Anat, Inanna, Isis, Hera, Demeter, Aphrodite
    • fused with paleolithic Great Mother
      • retained warrior and blood imagery
        • farming as warfare against sterility, famine, and death
        • seed dies, the earth is torn up, crops are ground, etc.
    • consorts all brutally killed and renewed
      • examples: Adonis, Osiris, Baal
    • female hero restoring harmony and balance
    • mistress of life and death
    • goddess of mysteries

Early Civilizations

  • City builders
    • mythos of city life
    • writing
    • Bible: civilization as disaster
    • Mesopotamia: civilization as nearly paradise
    • every city a holy city
      • a new axis mundi
      • gods live side-by-side with men
  • Flood myths
  • Withdrawn gods
    • patron deities
  • Theogony
    • creation from void
    • creation and evolution of gods
      • elemental separation by couples/pairs
      • sky, sea, earth
      • slaying of chaos monster
      • establishment of law
      • alternate: creation as self-sacrifice
  • Human legends
    • celebrating human achievement
    • example: Gilgamesh
    • civilized man parting from gods
    • unrealized quest for immortality

Axial Age

  • Beginnings of modern religion
    • prophets and sages
    • four movements:
      • Confucianism and Taoism
      • Buddhism and Hinduism
      • monotheism
      • Greek rationalism
  • Commonalities
    • conscious of suffering inherent in human condition
    • more spirituality, less ritual
    • conscience and morality
      • ethics
      • karma
    • compassion and justice
    • questioning religion
    • interior interpretation of myth
      • gods as mental states
  • Gulf between the human and the divine
    • no longer shared the same nature
    • the Infinite/the Good
  • Ancestor worship
    • Perfect Ancestor
  • Culture heroes
    • also: tragic heroes
  • Creativity
    • true creativity as selfless
      • new Great Mother
    • effortless creation by command

Post-Axial Period

  • Move from myth to history in the West
  • Mysticism
    • cognate with “mystery”
    • from Greek: “to close the eyes or the mouth”
  • Word of God
    • Shekhinah
      • wisdom
      • God on earth
  • Hidden Imam
    • hidden light and knowledge
    • long-awaited sage
  • No official versions of myths

Great Western Transformation

  • Modernization
    • technological
    • entrepreneurial
    • death of mythology
      • useless, false, outmoded
    • triumph of logos
      • pragmatism
      • science
      • efficiency
      • rationalism
    • scientist/inventor as hero
  • Effects of loss of myth
    • despair
    • depression
    • loss of sense of significance
    • impotence
    • rage
    • anxiety
    • loss of trust in own perception
    • alienation
    • loss of control over irrationality
      • loss of control over darker aspects of human nature
      • “un-reason”
        • fearful
        • destructive
    • nihilism
    • spiritual regression
  • Separation of the symbol and the symbolized
  • Science’s infinite universe as Eternal Silence
  • Rise of religious literalism
  • We need myths that…
    • help us identify with all our fellow humans
      • recognize humans as sacred and numinous in their own right
    • promote compassion
    • promote spirituality and engender transcendence
    • venerate earth as sacred
  • Modern mythwork