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P**E
The meaning of myth
Two other entries in this Very Short Introduction series can be seen as companion volumes to the present one. They are Classics, by Mary Beard & John Henderson, and Myth by Robert A. Segal. I would recommend reading those two - in either order - and then this one, although they each stand very well alone.Morales discusses various interpretations of the role of myth in Western culture, its functions and significance. Although she distances herself from works that restrict themselves to narrations and summaries of the myths themselves, she does include a list of Classical deities and their attributes, unapologetically admitting, "I am having my cake and eating it by including this". But the focus throughout is very much on the nature and function of myth rather than its content. The chapter on Freudian psychoanalysis is particularly interesting.She writes very well, often with a light touch and with frequent popular culture references.The book concludes with a useful 5-page Timeline - from 800 BC, "Early Greece" to 2007, the publication of this book - a comprehensive Reference section, and a very useful Further Reading section.If you want an understanding of myth, how it evolves and how it continues to be relevant, you should read this book.[PeterReeve]
S**R
Changed My Idea of What Mythology Is
I read this book prior to beginning my studies as a Classics major since I did not have any real grounding in classical myth. I originally thought this book would relate what the various myths were and how they were important. Thankfully, this book helped reshape my idea of what "myth" was and is while offering helpful interpretive keys to better appreciate and contextualize Greek mythology.While I do not suggest someone buy this if they want to read a summary of every Greek myth, I would suggest anyone purchase this if they are interested in *what* mythology is and *how* the Greeks used it to help explain their world to themselves.
B**E
Morales does an excellent job pointing out the modern contexts of interpretive stances ...
When people think of mythology, especially Greek mythology, they tend to imagine old stories such as the Iliad and Odyssey or the stories of heroes as told in Ovid. Seen as such, the myths become reduced to old stories that hold little to no meaning in our current society beyond an entertaining film or book. In reading Classical Mythology: A Very Short Introduction, I realized how much modern context influences interpretations of mythology and how much meaning modern society can still glean from Greek mythology. Morales does an excellent job pointing out the modern contexts of interpretive stances such as psychoanalysis and the use of Europa in EU propaganda. This books does an excellent job of portraying multiple interpretive stances from which mythology can be viewed. She presents an interesting definition of mythology, where the lore and ideology are interconnected, yet distinct. I enjoyed reading about the ways in which our modern society has adopted mythology into its foundation and famous icons, such as Prometheus at the Rockefeller Center.While Morales does give some good insight and enough background on the myths she discusses, I would have enjoyed a broader discussion of other mythological themes as well. Mythology is riddled with topics such as the effects of war and the virtues of women versus misogyny. It also would have been nice if she had given more examples and counter-examples of the points that she brings up in order to show the diversity of the mythology that exists even with the set of Greek mythology.Overall, this is an exceptional book for someone who is looking for a book on mythology, but wants to know about the interpretations of the myths instead of just the stories.
S**S
Well Done.
This book shows the modern ramifications of ancient myths.Well Done.
M**E
Five Stars
Nice Book, great read !!!
F**O
A very modern interpretation of ancient myth
This is a concise and handy guide to approaching Classical Mythology. It assumes the reader is already well-acquainted with the actual legends themselves, and focusses on lines of thought and interpretation. More interestingly perhaps, the author dwells in the present day and describes how ancient myth and its effects are still very alive within our modern culture.She strikes gold for me when she details how famous figures become mythologized. There was Princess Diana, whose death prompted a mass phenomenon of shrines and ritual mourning- as well as any number of rock stars and presidents. Our popular media creates gods and cults out of people in the same way ancient people deified their ancestors- and many traditional cultures still do.However she misses (or ignores?) a crucial insight. Ancient historians, cultural tradition, biblical and other sources reveal that some of the "gods" of antiquity are linked to actual people- namely the first sons and grandsons of Noah, whose longevities, deeds and wisdom would have appeared superhuman to the generations that later fell into ancestor worship: Noah's son Japheth, whose name became corrupted into "Jupiter" and so on.There were also the nephilim- described in various hebraic and non-biblical sources - as superheroes of extraordinary size and strength, and described in genesis as "the heroes of old", the "men of renown". The descendants of noah's grandson Tiras -Thirasians- known as Thracians by the Greeks- who worshiped their ancestor Thuras, as Thor- the god of thunder. The links between ancient myth and biblical reality are well documented for anyone with a genuinely open curiosity.
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