ways of interpreting myth: star wars and the greeks ancient vs. modern

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Ways of Interpreting Myth: Star Wars and the Greeks Ancient Vs. Modern

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Ways of Interpreting Myth:Star Wars and the Greeks

Ancient Vs. Modern

Modern Interpretations of Myth

Externalist Theories: Myths as Products of the Environment

Internalist Theories: Myths as Products of the Mind

Two modern meanings of “mythology”:• a system or set of myths• the methodological analysis of myths

A monolithic theory of myth vs. the multifunctionalism of mythThe autonomy of mythSee: Some Theories of Myth

Externalist Theories:Myths as Products of the Environment

Myths as Aetiology Comparative MythologyNature MythsMyths as RitualsCharter Myths

Myths as Aetiology

myth as explanation of the origin of things

myth as primitive science myth as primitive science

Aetiology in Greek Myth

Europa (eponymous hero) Creation myths Arachne

Athena and Arachne in Ovid’s Metamorphoses

Aetiology in Star Wars?

F. Max MüllerNature Myths

Max Müller1823-1900)

For Müller, the culture of the Vedic peoples represented a form of nature worship, an idea clearly influenced by Romanticism

Comparative approach: Study of Vedic peoples of ancient India applied to myths of other cultures (Greece and Rome)

Founder of the social scientific study of religion

The Comparative Method and Nature Myths in Star Wars?

The ForceThe Force is what gives a Jedi his power. It's an energy field created by all living things. It surrounds us and penetrates us. It binds the galaxy together.

Myths as Ritual

Sir James Frazer’ The Golden Bough (1890-1915)

myths as byproducts of ritual enactments

stories to explain religious ceremonies

The Golden Bough On-Line:http://www.bartleby.com/196/

Myths as Ritual in Star Wars?

Charter Myths

Bronsilaw Malinowski (1884-1942)

Selected Bibliography:http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/Anthro/Anth206/malinowski.htm

belief-systems set up to authorize and validate current social customs and institutions.

Charter Myths in Star Wars?

Structuralism

Claude Lévi-Strauss (1908-)

Jean-Paul Vernant

Pierre Vidal-Naquet

Claude Lévi-Strauss (1908-)

•myth reflect the mind's binary organization•humans tend to see world as reflection of their own physical and cerebral structure ( two hands, eyes, legs, etc.)•Left/right, raw,/cooked, pleasure/pain•Myth deals with the perception and reconciliation of these opposites• mediation of contradictionsIs there mediation of contradictions in Star Wars?

For more on Levi-Strauss see http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/klmno/levi-strauss_claude.html

Mediating Contradictions in Star Wars

EWOKS HUMANSDROIDS

simple complex

 nature technology

 FORCE DARK SIDE

 Nature Technology

Narratology

Vlaimir Propp (1895-1970)

Propp argued that all fairy tales were constructed of certain plot elements, which he called functions, and that these elements consistently occurred in a uniform sequence. Based on a study of one hundred folk tales, Propp devised a list of thirty-one generic functions, proposing that they encompassed all of the plot components from which fairy tales were constructed.

More on Propp: http://library.marist.edu/diglib/english/theorists/propp.htm

Narratology in Star Wars?

Feminist Approaches to Myth

Marija Gimbutas (1921-1994)

Marija Gimbutas was an archaeologist with a scholarly background in folklore and linguistics, making her uniquely qualified to synthesize information from science and myth into a controversial theory of a Goddess-based culture in prehistoric Europe. Joseph Campbell said that, if her work had been available to him, he would have held very different views about the archetypes of the female Divine in world mythology.

Primacy of Matriarchy

Feminist Approach to Star Wars?

Myths as Products of the Mind

Individual Mind

Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)id / ego / superego

dream world of the individual

Does Star Wars appeal to our individual dream world?

Myths as Products of the Mind

Collective Mind

Carl Jung (1875-1961) dream world of society

collective unconscious

archetypes: recurring myths characters, situations and events

archetype as primal form or pattern from which all other versions are derived

Does Star Wars appeal to our collective unconscious?

Mircea Eliade (1907-1986)

Eliade's analysis of religion assumes the existence of "the sacred" as the object of worship of religious humanity.

Myths reflect a creative era, a sacred time, a vanished epoch of unique holiness.

Is Star Wars functioning in a creative era, a sacred time?

More on Eliade: http://www.angelfire.com/electronic/bodhidharma/mircea.html

Joseph Campbell1904-1987

Hero's rite of passage

journey of maturation

Growth into true selfhood (Jung's individuation)

More on Campbell: http://www.jcf.org/about_jc.php

Tragedy and Comedy in the Monomyth

– “The universal tragedy of man”– “The happy ending of the fairy tale, the myth, and the

divine comedy of the soul, is to be read , not as a contradiction, but as a transcendence of the universal tragedy of man.” (pg. 28)

– It is the business of mythology proper, and of the fairy tale, to reveal the specific dangers and techniques of the dark interior way from tragedy to comedy. (pg. 29)

– Is Tantalus part of the Monomyth?

The World Navel

Delphi, the navel of the Greek world

Is there a world navel in Star Wars?

The omphalos

The effect of the successful adventure of the hero is the unlocking and release again of the flow of life into the body of the world.(Campbell, pg. 40)

The world navel is ubiquitous. And since it is the source of all existence, it yields the world’s plentitude of both good and evil.”(Campbell, Pg. 44)

The Star Wars Navel?