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  • The term mythology can refer either to a collection of myths or to the study of myths.

  • A mythology, in the sense of a collection of myths, is an important feature of many

  • cultures. According to Alan Dundes, a myth is a sacred narrative explaining how the world

  • and humankind assumed their present form, although, in a very broad sense, the word

  • can refer to any traditional story. Bruce Lincoln defines myth as "ideology in narrative

  • form". Myths may arise as either truthful depictions or overelaborated accounts of historical

  • events, as allegory for or personification of natural phenomena, or as an explanation

  • of ritual. They are used to convey religious or idealized experience, to establish behavioral

  • models, and to teach. Modern mythopoeia such as fantasy novels, manga, and urban legend,

  • with many competing artificial mythoi acknowledged as fiction, supports the idea of myth as a

  • modern, not just ancient, social practice. Mythology, in the sense of the study of myths,

  • dates back to antiquity. Early rival classifications of Greek mythos by Euhemerus, Plato's Phaedrus,

  • and Sallustius were developed by the neoplatonists and revived by Renaissance mythographers.

  • Nineteenth-century comparative mythology reinterpreted myth as a primitive and failed counterpart

  • of science, a "disease of language", or a misinterpretation of magical ritual. By contrast,

  • many later interpretations have rejected a conflict between myth and science, sometimes

  • viewing myths as expressions of, or metaphors for, human psychology. Tension between the

  • search for a monomyth or Ur-myth and skepticism toward such comparativism has marked scholarship

  • on myth.

  • Nature of myths Characteristics

  • The main characters in myths are usually gods, supernatural heroes and humans. As stories,

  • myths are often endorsed by rulers and priests and closely linked to religion or spirituality.

  • In the society in which it is told, a myth is usually regarded as a true account of the

  • remote past. In fact, many societies have two categories of traditional narrative, "true

  • stories" or myths, and "false stories" or fables. Creation myths generally take place

  • in a primordial age, when the world had not yet achieved its current form, and explain

  • how the world gained its current form and how customs, institutions and taboos were

  • established. Terminology

  • The term "mythology" can refer either to the study of myths or to a body or collection

  • of myths. For example, landscape mythology is the study of landscape features in terms

  • of totemistic mythology, whereas Hittite mythology is the body of myths of the Hittites. Alan

  • Dundes defines myth as a sacred narrative which explains how the world and humanity

  • evolved into their present form, "a story that serves to define the fundamental worldview

  • of a culture by explaining aspects of the natural world and delineating the psychological

  • and social practices and ideals of a society". Many scholars in other fields use the term

  • "myth" in somewhat different ways; in a very broad sense, the word can refer to any traditional

  • story or, in casual use, a popular misconception or imaginary entity. Because the folkloristic

  • meaning of "myth" is often confused with this more pejorative usage, the original unambiguous

  • term "mythos" may be a better word to distinguish the positive definition from the negative.

  • Closely related to myth are legend and folktale. Myths, legends, and folktales are different

  • types of traditional story. Unlike mythos, folktales can be set in any time and any place,

  • and they are not considered true or sacred by the societies that tell them. Like mythos,

  • legends are stories that are traditionally considered true, but are set in a more recent

  • time, when the world was much as it is today. Legends generally feature humans as their

  • main characters, whereas myths generally focus on superhuman characters.

  • The distinction between myth, legend, and folktale is meant simply as a useful tool

  • for grouping traditional stories. In many cultures, it is hard to draw a sharp line

  • between myths and legends. Instead of dividing their traditional stories into myths, legends,

  • and folktales, some cultures divide them into two categories, one that roughly corresponds

  • to folktales, and one that combines myths and legends. Even myths and folktales are

  • not completely distinct. A story may be considered true in one society, but considered fictional

  • in another society. In fact, when a myth loses its status as part of a religious system,

  • it often takes on traits more typical of folktales, with its formerly divine characters reinterpreted

  • as human heroes, giants, or fairies. Myth, legend, and folktale are only a few

  • of the categories of traditional stories. Other categories include anecdotes and some

  • kinds of jokes. Traditional stories, in turn, are only one category within folklore, which

  • also includes items such as gestures, costumes, and music.

  • Origins of myth Euhemerism

  • One theory claims that myths are distorted accounts of real historical events. According

  • to this theory, storytellers repeatedly elaborated upon historical accounts until the figures

  • in those accounts gained the status of gods. For example, one might argue that the myth

  • of the wind-god Aeolus evolved from a historical account of a king who taught his people to

  • use sails and interpret the winds. Herodotus and Prodicus made claims of this kind. This

  • theory is named "euhemerism" after the mythologist Euhemerus, who suggested that the Greek gods

  • developed from legends about human beings. Allegory

  • Some theories propose that myths began as allegories. According to one theory, myths

  • began as allegories for natural phenomena: Apollo represents the sun, Poseidon represents

  • water, and so on. According to another theory, myths began as allegories for philosophical

  • or spiritual concepts: Athena represents wise judgment, Aphrodite represents desire, etc.

  • The 19th century Sanskritist Maxller supported an allegorical theory of myth. He believed

  • that myths began as allegorical descriptions of nature, but gradually came to be interpreted

  • literally: for example, a poetic description of the sea as "raging" was eventually taken

  • literally, and the sea was then thought of as a raging god.

  • Personification

  • Some thinkers believe that myths resulted from the personification of inanimate objects

  • and forces. According to these thinkers, the ancients worshipped natural phenomena such

  • as fire and air, gradually coming to describe them as gods. For example, according to the

  • theory of mythopoeic thought, the ancients tended to view things as persons, not as mere

  • objects; thus, they described natural events as acts of personal gods, thus giving rise

  • to myths. Myth-ritual theory

  • According to the myth-ritual theory, the existence of myth is tied to ritual. In its most extreme

  • form, this theory claims that myths arose to explain rituals. This claim was first put

  • forward by the biblical scholar William Robertson Smith. According to Smith, people begin performing

  • rituals for some reason that is not related to myth; later, after they have forgotten

  • the original reason for a ritual, they try to account for the ritual by inventing a myth

  • and claiming that the ritual commemorates the events described in that myth. The anthropologist

  • James Frazer had a similar theory. Frazer believed that primitive man starts out with

  • a belief in magical laws; later, when man begins to lose faith in magic, he invents

  • myths about gods and claims that his formerly magical rituals are religious rituals intended

  • to appease the gods. Functions of myth

  • Mircea Eliade argued that one of the foremost functions of myth is to establish models for

  • behavior and that myths may also provide a religious experience. By telling or reenacting

  • myths, members of traditional societies detach themselves from the present and return to

  • the mythical age, thereby bringing themselves closer to the divine.

  • Lauri Honko asserts that, in some cases, a society will reenact a myth in an attempt

  • to reproduce the conditions of the mythical age. For example, it will reenact the healing

  • performed by a god at the beginning of time in order to heal someone in the present. Similarly,

  • Roland Barthes argues that modern culture explores religious experience. Because it

  • is not the job of science to define human morality, a religious experience is an attempt

  • to connect with a perceived moral past, which is in contrast with the technological present.

  • Joseph Campbell writes: "In the long view of the history of mankind, four essential

  • functions of mythology can be discerned. The first and most distinctivevitalizing

  • allis that of eliciting and supporting a sense of awe before the mystery of being."

  • "The second function of mythology is to render a cosmology, an image of the universe that

  • will support and be supported by this sense of awe before the mystery of the presence

  • and the presence of a mystery." "A third function of mythology is to support the current social

  • order, to integrate the individual organically with his group;" "The fourth function of mythology

  • is to initiate the individual into the order of realities of his own psyche, guiding him

  • toward his own spiritual enrichment and realization." In a later work Campbell explains the relationship

  • of myth to civilisation: The rise and fall of civilisations in the

  • long, broad course of history can be seen largely to be a function of the integrity

  • and cogency of their supporting canons of myth; for not authority but aspiration is

  • the motivator, builder, and transformer of civilisation. A mythological canon is an organisation

  • of symbols, ineffable in import, by which the energies of aspiration are evoked and

  • gathered toward a focus. And yet the history of civilisation is not

  • one of harmony. There are two pathologies. One is interpreting

  • myth as pseudo-science, as though it had to do with directing nature instead of putting

  • you in accord with nature, and the other is the political interpretation of myths to the

  • advantage of one group within a society, or one society within a group of nations.

  • Campbell gives his answer to the question: what is the function of myth today? in episode

  • 2 of Bill Moyers's The Power of Myth series. Study of mythology

  • Historically, the important approaches to the study of mythology have been those of

  • Vico, Schelling, Schiller, Jung, Freud, Lévy-Bruhl, Lévi-Strauss, Frye, the Soviet school, and

  • the Myth and Ritual School. Pre-modern theories

  • The critical interpretation of myth goes back as far as the Presocratics. Euhemerus was

  • one of the most important pre-modern mythologists. He interpreted myths as accounts of actual

  • historical events, distorted over many retellings. Sallustius, for example, divides myths into

  • five categoriestheological, physical, animastic, material and mixed. This last being

  • those myths which show the interaction between two or more of the previous categories and

  • which, he says, are particularly used in initiations. To ones who are even trying to change content

  • of the myth according to probability would be found criticism in Plato Phaedrus, in which

  • Socrates says that it is the province of one who is "vehemently curious and laborious,

  • and not entirely happy . . .". Although Plato famously condemned poetic myth

  • when discussing the education of the young in the Republic, primarily on the grounds

  • that there was a danger that the young and uneducated might take the stories of Gods

  • and heroes literally, nevertheless he constantly refers to myths of all kinds throughout his

  • writings. As Platonism developed in the phases commonly called 'middle Platonism' and neoplatonism,

  • such writers as Plutarch, Porphyry, Proclus, Olympiodorus and Damascius wrote explicitly

  • about the symbolic interpretation of traditional and Orphic myths. Interest in polytheistic

  • mythology revived in the Renaissance, with early works on mythography appearing in the

  • 16th century, such as the Theologia mythologica.Myths are not the same as fables, legends, folktales,

  • fairy tales, anecdotes, or fiction, but the concepts may overlap. Notably, during the

  • nineteenth century period of Romanticism, folktales and fairy tales were perceived as

  • eroded fragments of earlier mythology. Mythological themes are also very often consciously employed

  • in literature, beginning with Homer. The resulting work may expressly refer to a mythological

  • background without itself being part of a body of myths. The medieval romance in particular

  • plays with this process of turning myth into literature. Euhemerism refers to the process

  • of rationalization of myths, putting themes formerly imbued with mythological qualities

  • into pragmatic contexts, for example following a cultural or religious paradigm shift.

  • Conversely, historical and literary material may acquire mythological qualities over time,

  • for example the Matter of Britain referring to the legendary history of Great Britain,

  • especially those focused on King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table, and the Matter

  • of France, based on historical events of the fifth and eighth centuries, respectively,

  • were first made into epic poetry and became partly mythological over the following centuries.

  • "Conscious generation" of mythology has been termed mythopoeia by J. R. R. Tolkien[16],

  • and was notoriously also suggested, very separately, by Nazi ideologist Alfred Rosenberg.

  • 19th-century theories The first scholarly theories of myth appeared

  • during the second half of the 19th century. In general, these 19th-century theories framed

  • myth as a failed or obsolete mode of thought, often by interpreting myth as the primitive

  • counterpart of modern science. For example, E. B. Tylor interpreted myth

  • as an attempt at a literal explanation for natural phenomena: unable to conceive of impersonal

  • natural laws, early man tried to explain natural phenomena by attributing souls to inanimate

  • objects, giving rise to animism. According to Tylor, human thought evolves through various

  • stages, starting with mythological ideas and gradually progressing to scientific ideas.

  • Not all scholarsnot even all 19th century scholarshave agreed with this view. For

  • example, Lucienvy-Bruhl claimed that "the primitive mentality is a condition of the

  • human mind, and not a stage in its historical development."

  • Maxller called myth a "disease of language". He speculated that myths arose due to the

  • lack of abstract nouns and neuter gender in ancient languages: anthropomorphic figures

  • of speech, necessary in such languages, were eventually taken literally, leading to the

  • idea that natural phenomena were conscious beings, gods.

  • The anthropologist James Frazer saw myths as a misinterpretation of magical rituals;

  • which were themselves based on a mistaken idea of natural law. According to Frazer,

  • man begins with an unfounded belief in impersonal magical laws. When he realizes that his applications

  • of these laws don't work, he gives up his belief in natural law, in favor of a belief

  • in personal gods controlling naturethus giving rise to religious myths. Meanwhile,

  • man continues practicing formerly magical rituals through force of habit, reinterpreting

  • them as reenactments of mythical events. Finally, Frazer contends, man realizes that nature

  • does follow natural laws, but now he discovers their true nature through science. Here, again,

  • science makes myth obsolete: as Frazer puts it, man progresses "from magic through religion

  • to science". Robert Segal asserts that by pitting mythical

  • thought against modern scientific thought, such theories implied that modern man must

  • abandon myth. 20th-century theories

  • Many 20th-century theories of myth rejected the 19th-century theories' opposition of myth

  • and science. In general, "twentieth-century theories have tended to see myth as almost

  • anything but an outdated counterpart to science […] Consequently, moderns are not obliged

  • to abandon myth for science." Swiss psychologist Carl Jung tried to understand

  • the psychology behind world myths. Jung asserted that all humans share certain innate unconscious

  • psychological forces, which he called archetypes. Jung believed that the similarities between

  • the myths from different cultures reveals the existence of these universal archetypes.

  • Joseph Campbell believed that there were two different orders of mythology: myths that

  • "are metaphorical of spiritual potentiality in the human being," and myths "that have

  • to do with specific societies". Joseph Campbell's major work is The Masks

  • of God I-IV. In the first volume, Primitive Mythology, he outlines clearly his intention:

  • Without straining beyond the treasuries of evidence already on hand in these widely scattered

  • departments of our subject, therefore, but simply gathering from them the membra disjuncta

  • of a unitary mythological science, I attempt in the following pages the first sketch of

  • a natural history of the gods and heroes, such as in its final form should include in

  • its purview all divine beingsas zoology includes all animals and botany all plantsnot

  • regarding any as sacrosanct or beyond its scientific domain. For, as in the visible

  • world of the vegetable and animal kingdoms, so also in the visionary world of the gods:

  • there has been a history, an evolution, a series of mutations, governed by laws; and

  • to show forth such laws is the proper aim of science.

  • In his fourth volume however he coins the phrase, creative mythology, which he explains

  • as: In the context of traditional mythology, the

  • symbols are presented in socially maintained rites, through which the individual is required

  • to experience, or will pretend to have experienced, certain insights, sentiments and commitments.

  • In what I'm calling creative mythology, on the other hand, this order is reversed: the

  • individual has had an experience of his ownof order, horror, beauty, or even mere

  • exhiliration-which he seeks to communicate through signs; and if his realization has

  • been of a certain depth and import, his communication will have the force and value of living myth-for

  • those, that is to say, who receive and respond to it of themselves, with recognition, uncoerced.

  • Claudevi-Strauss believed that myths reflect patterns in the mind and interpreted those

  • patterns more as fixed mental structuresspecifically, pairs of oppositesthan as unconscious

  • feelings or urges. In his appendix to Myths, Dreams and Mysteries,

  • and in The Myth of the Eternal Return, Mircea Eliade attributed modern man’s anxieties

  • to his rejection of myths and the sense of the sacred.

  • In the 1950s, Roland Barthes published a series of essays examining modern myths and the process

  • of their creation in his book Mythologies.

  • Comparative mythology

  • Comparative mythology is the systematic comparison of myths from different cultures. It seeks

  • to discover underlying themes that are common to the myths of multiple cultures. In some

  • cases, comparative mythologists use the similarities between different mythologies to argue that

  • those mythologies have a common source. This common source may be a common source of inspiration

  • or a common "protomythology" that diverged into the various mythologies we see today.

  • Nineteenth-century interpretations of myth were often highly comparative, seeking a common

  • origin for all myths. However, modern-day scholars tend to be more suspicious of comparative

  • approaches, avoiding overly general or universal statements about mythology. One exception

  • to this modern trend is Joseph Campbell's book The Hero With a Thousand Faces, which

  • claims that all hero myths follow the same underlying pattern. This theory of a "monomyth"

  • is out of favor with the mainstream study of mythology.

  • Modern mythology

  • In modern society, myth is often regarded as historical or obsolete. Many scholars in

  • the field of cultural studies are now beginning to research the idea that myth has worked

  • itself into modern discourses. Modern formats of communication allow for widespread communication

  • across the globe, thus enabling mythological discourse and exchange among greater audiences

  • than ever before. Various elements of myth can now be found in television, cinema and

  • video games. Although myth was traditionally transmitted

  • through the oral tradition on a small scale, the technology of the film industry has enabled

  • filmmakers to transmit myths to large audiences via film dissemination. In the psychology

  • of Carl Jung, myths are the expression of a culture or society’s goals, fears, ambitions

  • and dreams. Film is ultimately an expression of the society in which it was credited, and

  • reflects the norms and ideals of the time and location in which it is created. In this

  • sense, film is simply the evolution of myth. The technological aspect of film changes the

  • way the myth is distributed, but the core idea of the myth is the same.

  • The basis of modern storytelling in both cinema and television lies deeply rooted in the mythological

  • tradition. Many contemporary and technologically advanced movies often rely on ancient myths

  • to construct narratives. The Disney Corporation is notorious among cultural study scholars

  • forreinventingtraditional childhood myths. While many films are not as obvious

  • as Disney fairy tales in respect to the employment of myth, the plots of many films are largely

  • based on the rough structure of the myth. Mythological archetypes such as the cautionary

  • tale regarding the abuse of technology, battles between gods, and creation stories are often

  • the subject of major film productions. These films are often created under the guise of

  • cyberpunk action movies, fantasy dramas, and apocalyptic tales. Although the range of narratives,

  • as well as the medium in which it is being told is constantly increasing, it is clear

  • that myth continues to be a pervasive and essential component of the collective imagination

  • Recent films such as Clash of the Titans, Immortals, or Thor continue the trend of mining

  • traditional mythology in order to directly create a plot for modern consumption.

  • With the invention of modern myths such as urban legends, the mythological traditional

  • will carry on to the increasing variety of mediums available in the 21st century and

  • beyond. The crucial idea is that myth is not simply a collection of stories permanently

  • fixed to a particular time and place in history, but an ongoing social practice within every

  • society. Etymology

  • The word mythology "exposition of myths" comes from Middle French mythologie, from Late Latin

  • mythologia, from Greek μυθολογία mythologia "legendary lore, a telling of mythic

  • legends; a legend, story, tale," from μῦθος mythos "myth" and -λογία -logia "study."

  • See also

  • General Archetypal literary criticism

  • Artificial mythology Creation myth

  • Flood myth Fairy

  • Fable Geomythology

  • Legendary creature LGBT themes in mythology

  • Mytheme Mythical place

  • Mythography

  • National myth Origin-of-death myth

  • Mythological archetypes Culture hero

  • Death deity Earth Mother

  • First man or woman Hero

  • Life-death-rebirth deity Lunar deity

  • Psychopomp Sky father

  • Solar deity Trickster

  • Underworld Myth and religion

  • Bengali mythology Chinese mythology

  • Christian mythology Hindu mythology

  • Islamic mythology Japanese mythology

  • Jesus Christ in comparative mythology Jewish mythology

  • Magic and mythology Maya mythology

  • Religion and mythology Lists

  • List of deities List of legendary creatures by type

  • List of legendary creatures List of mythical objects

  • List of mythologies List of women warriors in folklore

  • Notes

  • References Journals about mythology

  • New Comparative Mythology / Nouvelle Mythologie Comparée, http:nouvellemythologiecomparee.hautetfort.com/

  • Ollodagos, http:www.sbec.bepublications/ollodagos Studia Mythologica Slavica, http:sms.zrc-sazu.si/

  • Mythological Studies Journal,http:journals.sfu.caindex.phpindex The Journal of Germanic Mythology and Folklore,

  • http:www.jgmf.org/ Books

  • Armstrong, Karen. "A Short History of Myth". Knopf Canada, 2006.

  • Bascom, William. "The Forms of Folklore: Prose Narratives". 'Sacred Narrative: Readings in

  • the Theory of Myth. Ed. Alan Dundes. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. 5–29.

  • Bulfinch, Thomas. Bulfinch's Mythology. Whitefish: Kessinger, 2004.

  • Campbell, Joeseph. "The Power of Myth". New York: Doubleday, 1988.

  • Doty, William. Myth: A Handbook. Westport: Greenwood, 2004.

  • Dundes, Alan. "Binary Opposition in Myth: The Propp/Levi-Strauss Debate in Retrospect".

  • Western Folklore 56: 39–50. Dundes, Alan. Introduction. Sacred Narrative:

  • Readings in the Theory of Myth. Ed. Alan Dundes. Berkeley: University of California Press,

  • 1984. 1–3. Dunes, Alan. "Madness in Method Plus a Plea

  • for Projective Inversion in Myth". Myth and Method. Ed. Laurie Patton and Wendy Doniger.

  • Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1996.

  • Eliade, Mircea. Myth and Reality. Trans. Willard R. Trask. New York: Harper & Row, 1963.

  • Eliade, Mircea. Myths, Dreams and Mysteries. Trans. Philip Mairet. New York: Harper & Row,

  • 1967. "Euhemerism". The Concise Oxford Dictionary

  • of World Religions. Ed. John Bowker. Oxford University Press, 2000. Oxford Reference Online.

  • Oxford University Press. UCBerkeley Library. 20 March 2009 .

  • Fabiani, Paolo "The Philosophy of the Imagination in Vico and Malebranche". F.U.P., English

  • edition 2009. PDF Frankfort, Henri, et al. The Intellectual

  • Adventure of Ancient Man: An Essay on Speculative Thought in the Ancient Near East. Chicago:University

  • of Chicago Press, 1977. Frazer, James. The Golden Bough. New York:

  • Macmillan, 1922. Graf, Fritz. Greek Mythology. Trans. Thomas

  • Marier. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993.

  • Honko, Lauri. "The Problem of Defining Myth". Sacred Narrative: Readings in the Theory of

  • Myth. Ed. Alan Dundes. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. 41–52.

  • Kirk, G.S. Myth: Its Meaning and Functions in Ancient and Other Cultures. Berkeley: Cambridge

  • University Press, 1973. Kirk, G.S. "On Defining Myths". Sacred Narrative:

  • Readings in the Theory of Myth. Ed. Alan Dundes. Berkeley: University of California Press,

  • 1984. 53–61. Leonard, Scott. "The History of Mythology:

  • Part I". Scott A. Leonard's Home Page. August 2007.Youngstown State University, 17 November

  • 2009 Littleton, Covington. The New Comparative

  • Mythology: An Anthropological Assessment of the Theories of Georges Dumezil. Berkeley:

  • University of California Press, 1973. Meletinsky, Elea. The Poetics of Myth. Trans.

  • Guy Lanoue and Alexandre Sadetsky. New York: Routledge, 2000.

  • "myth." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online, 21 March 2009

  • "myths". A Dictionary of English Folklore. Jacqueline Simpson and Steve Roud. Oxford

  • University Press, 2000. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. UCBerkeley Library.

  • 20 March 2009 Oxfordreference.com Northup, Lesley. "Myth-Placed Priorities:

  • Religion and the Study of Myth". Religious Studies Review 32.1(2006): 5–10.

  • O'Flaherty, Wendy. Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook. London: Penguin, 1975.

  • Pettazzoni, Raffaele. "The Truth of Myth". Sacred Narrative: Readings in the Theory of

  • Myth. Ed. Alan Dundes. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. 98–109.

  • Segal, Robert. Myth: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2004.

  • Simpson, Michael. Introduction. Apollodorus. Gods and Heroes of the Greeks. Trans. Michael

  • Simpson. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1976. 1–9.

  • Singer, Irving. "Introduction: Philosophical Dimensions of Myth and Cinema." Cinematic

  • Mythmaking: Philosophy in Film. Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States: MIT Press Books,

  • 2008. 3–6. Web. 23 Oct. 2011. Indick, William. "Classical Heroes in Modern

  • Movies: Mythological Patterns of the Superhero." Journal of Media Psychology 9.3: 93–95.

  • York University Libraries. Web. Koven, Mikel J. "Folklore Studies and Popular

  • Film and Television: a Necessary Critical Survey." Journal of American Folklore 116.460:

  • 176–195. Print. Olson, Eric L.. "Great Expectations: the Role

  • of Myth in 1980s Films with Child Heroes". Virginia Polytechnic Scholarly Library. Virginia

  • Polytechnic Institute And State University. Retrieved October 24, 2011. 

  • Matira, Lopamundra. "Children's Oral Literature and Modern Mass Media." Indian Folklore Research

  • Journal 5.8: 55–57. Print. Cormer, John. "Narrative." Critical Ideas

  • in Television Studies. New York, United States: Charendon Press, 2007. 47–59. Print.

  • Further reading Stefan Arvidsson, Aryan Idols. Indo-European

  • Mythology as Ideology and Science, University of Chicago Press, 2006. ISBN 0-226-02860-7

  • Roland Barthes, Mythologies Kees W. Bolle, The Freedom of Man in Myth.

  • Vanderbilt University Press, 1968. Richard Buxton. The Complete World of Greek

  • Mythology. London: Thames & Hudson, 2004. E. Csapo, Theories of Mythology

  • Edith Hamilton, Mythology Graves, Robert. "Introduction." New Larousse

  • Encyclopedia of Mythology. Trans. Richard Aldington and Delano Ames. London: Hamlyn,

  • 1968. v–viii. Joseph Campbell

  • The Hero with a Thousand Faces. Princeton University Press, 1949.

  • Flight of the Wild Gander: Explorations in the Mythological Dimension: Select Essays

  • 1944–1968 New World Library, 3rd ed., ISBN 978-1-57731-210-9.

  • The Power of Myth. Doubleday, 1988, ISBN 0-385-24773-7. Thou Art That. New World Library, 2001, ISBN

  • 1-57731-202-3

  • Mircea Eliade Cosmos and History: The Myth of the Eternal

  • Return. Princeton University Press, 1954. The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of

  • Religion. Trans. Willard R. Trask. NY: Harper & Row, 1961.

  • Louis Herbert Gray [ed.], The Mythology of All Races, in 12 vols., 1916.

  • Lucienvy-Bruhl Mental Functions in Primitive Societies

  • Primitive Mentality The Soul of the Primitive

  • The Supernatural and the Nature of the Primitive Mind

  • Primitive Mythology The Mystic Experience and Primitive Symbolism

  • Charles H. Long, Alpha: The Myths of Creation. George Braziller, 1963.

  • O'Flaherty, Wendy. Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook. London: Penguin, 1975.

  • Barry B. Powell, Classical Myth, 5th edition, Prentice-Hall.

  • Santillana and Von Dechend. Hamlet's Mill: An Essay Investigating the Origins of Human

  • Knowledge And Its Transmission Through Myth, Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-87923-215-3.

  • Isabelle Loring Wallace and Jennie Hirsh, Contemporary Art and Classical Myth. Farnham:

  • Ashgate, ISBN 978-0-7546-6974-6 Walker, Steven F. and Segal, Robert A., Jung

  • and the Jungians on Myth: An Introduction, Theorists of Myth, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-8153-2259-7.

  • Vanda Zajko and Miriam Leonard, Lauphing with Medusa. Oxford: Oxford `University Press,

  • ISBN 978-0-19-923794-4. Zong, In-Sob. Folk Tales from Korea. 3rd ed.

  • Elizabeth: Hollym, 1989. External links

  • The New Student's Reference Work/Mythology, ed. Beach, at wikisource.

  • Leonard, Scott. "The History of Mythology: Part I". Youngstown State University.

  • Greek mythology Sacred texts

  • Myths and Myth-Makers Old Tales and Superstitions Interpreted by comparative mythology by John

  • Fiske. LIMC Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae,

  • a database of ancient objects linked with mythology

  • Joseph Campbell on Bill Moyers's The Power of Myth

The term mythology can refer either to a collection of myths or to the study of myths.

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B2 中高級 美國腔

神話學 (Mythology)

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    郭涓汝 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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