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Published bySilas Lewis Whitehead Modified over 9 years ago
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Classical Mythology Three types of Story
‘True’ Myth – gods/elements with religious or scientific functions; often etiological (explanatory) Legend or Saga – stories about humans in faraway past often with special connections to gods; rooted in historical past; often with social/political uses Folktale – stories of common folks that illustrate everyday morals; loaded with magic and fantasy; functions as entertainment, as well as instilling social values
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Sources of Classical Mythology
Greek ages (3000 BC – 331 BC) derived from literature, arts, and architectural structures of the Greek. Greek adapted from eastern Mediterranean tales and contacts. Roman period (753 BC- AD 450) a reinterpretation of Greek stories compounded with Rome’s native, rural traditional tales and religion and stories picked up from contacts around the Mediterranean.
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General Definition of ‘Myth’
A traditional narrative with a beginning, middle, and end. With plot, characters, and setting. No single author or original source. Orally conveyed. In effect, an organic piece—a performative.
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Fields Using Classical Myth
Theology Anthropology Archeology History Philosophy Psychiatry Art Marketing Science Classical Studies
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Entries into Ordinary Language
Odyssey, erotic, Adonis, hector, protean, Nestorian, mentor, lethal, Oedipus complex, panic, Amazon, calypso, echo, Achilles’ heel, aphrodisiac, bacchanal, satyriasis, hermaphrodite, Herculean, atlas, hydra, hyacinths, narcissus, etc.
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Class Sources Ovid – Roman poet, ca 43 BC – AD 17
Homer – Greek poet, ca 750 BC, a ‘rhapsodos’
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Chance is always powerful
Chance is always powerful. Let your hook always be cast; in the pool where you least expect it, there will be fish Ovid
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