Myth in human history
(2010)

Nonfiction

eAudiobook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : The Great Courses, 2010
Made available through hoopla
EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 audio file (1080 min.)) : digital

ISBN/ISSN
9781682765326 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) MWT12329125, 1682765326 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) 12329125
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Lecturer: Grant L Voth

Myths provide the keys to truly grasping the ways that principles, rituals, codes, and taboos are woven into the fabric of a particular society or civilization. It's through myths that we can answer these and other fundamental questions: How was the universe created, and why? What is the purpose of evil? Why is society organized the way it is? How did natural features like rivers, mountains, and oceans emerge? This entertaining and illuminating course plunges you into the world's greatest myths. Taking you from ancient Greece and Japan to North America and Africa to New Zealand and Great Britain, these 36 lectures reveal mythology's profound importance in shaping nearly every aspect of culture. You'll also discover the hidden connections between them - a comparative approach that emphasizes the universality of myths across cultures. Along with the stories themselves, you'll encounter fascinating characters, including Herakles, the ancient Greek hero whose life illustrates the idea that all heroic stories have a similar structure; Loki, the shape-shifting trickster who introduces the concept of time into the Norse realm of Asgard; and King Arthur, the Celtic lord and founder of the Knights of the Round Table. Myths, according to Professor Voth, are "gifts from the ancestors to be cherished." His enchanting lectures are the perfect way for you to celebrate these cherished gifts, inviting you to develop your own interpretations of these age-old tales, as well as to ponder the role that myths - both ancient and everyday - play in your own life. All Lectures: 1. Myth and Meaning 2. The Continuing Importance of Myth 3. Creation Myths 4. Mesopotamian Creation - Enuma Elish 5. Hebrew Creation Myths 6. Emergence and World-Parent Creation Myths 7. Cosmic Egg and Ex Nihilo Creation Myths 8. Earth-Diver and Dismembered God Creation Myths 9. Mesopotamian and Hebrew Flood Myths 10. Other Flood Myths 11. Myths of Cosmic Destruction 12. Greek and Norse Pantheons 13. The Great Goddess Remembered? 14. The Goddess - Inanna and Dumuzi 15. The Goddess - Isis and Osiris 16. The Eclipse of the Goddess 17. Shamans and Vegetation Gods 18. Sky Gods and Earth Goddesses 19. Creator Gods 20. Gods and Goddesses of India 21. Hero Myths 22. Mythic Heroes - Gilgamesh 23. Mythic Heroes - King Arthur 24. Mythic Heroes - Jason and the Argonauts 25. The Monomyths of Rank and Campbell 26. Mythic Heroes - Mwindo 27. Female Heroes - Demeter and Hester Prynne 28. Female Heroes - Psyche and Beauty 29. The Trickster in Mythology 30. Tricksters from around the World 31. Native American Tricksters 32. African Tricksters 33. Mythic Tricksters - Eshu and Legba 34. The Places of Myth - Rocks and Lakes 35. The Places of Myth - Mountains 36. The Places of Myth - Sacred Trees

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits