Synopses & Reviews
Series information: Blackwell Companions to the Ancient WorldThese volumes will each contain a mixture of narrative and thematic analysis in thirty to forty concise, newly commissioned essays written by individual scholars within their area of specialization. Ancient historyHellenistic World - Andrew Erskine, University College Dublin (2003)Roman Empire - David Potter, University of Michigan (2003)Ancient Near East - Daniel Snell, University of Oklahoma (2004)Archaic Greek World - Kurt Raaflaub, Brown University, and Hans van Wees, University College London (2004)Classical Greek World - Konrad Kinzl, Trent University, and Lawrence Tritle, Loyola Marymount University (2004)Roman Republic - Nathan Rosenstein, Ohio State University, and Robert Morstein-Marx, University of California, Santa Barbara (2005)Volumes are planned on Late Antiquity and Byzantium and Ancient Egypt.Literature and CultureLatin Literature - Stephen Harrison, Corpus Christi College, Oxford (2004)Ancient Epic - John Miles Foley, University of Missouri (2004)Greek and Roman Historiography - John Marincola, New York University (2005)Greek Tragedy - Justina Gregory, Smith College (2005)Classical Mythology - Ken Dowden, University of Birmingham (proposed here)Greek Literature - Pat Easterling, Cambridge (approached)Other volumes are planned on the Classical Heritage, Greek and Roman Comedy, Greek Religion, and Roman Religion.Main blurb: This book is an essential reference work for anyone interested in understanding the mythology of the classical world and its influence on western civilization.It begins by examining the relationship between myth and other traditional tales - folktales, sagas, legends - and between myth andhistorical narrative. The book then provides an account of all the major ancient and modern theories of myth and the role of myth in religion. Sections on myth in Greek and Roman literature are followed by an account of the afterlife of Greek myth from the Reniassance to the present day.The Companion to Classical Mythology supplies the context necessary to understand classical myth. It will be a vital resource for students of classical, English and comparative literature, as well as students of ancient religion.
Review
"Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above." (Choice, 1 November 2011)
"This collection of twenty eight articles on interpreting Greco-Roman culture presents a comprehensive, multidisciplinary approach to examining Greek mythology within the broader context of the intellectual and cultural development of the ancient world and provides an in depth discussion of the influence of traditional stories on the development of a shared historical culture." (Book News, 1 August 2011)
Synopsis
A Companion to Greek Mythology presents a series of essays that explore the phenomenon of Greek myth from its origins in shared Indo-European story patterns and the Greeks’ contacts with their Eastern Mediterranean neighbours through its development as a shared language and thought-system for the Greco-Roman world.
- Features essays from a prestigious international team of literary experts
- Includes coverage of Greek myth’s intersection with history, philosophy and religion
- Introduces readers to topics in mythology that are often inaccessible to non-specialists
- Addresses the Hellenistic and Roman periods as well as Archaic and Classical Greece
Synopsis
A Companion to Greek Mythology approaches the richly diverse phenomenon of Greek myth from a distinctive new angle -- one that delves deeply into its origins in shared Indo-European story patterns and the Greeks’ contacts with their Eastern Mediterranean neighbours. Contributions from a team of international experts trace the development of Greek myth into a shared language, heritage, and way of thinking throughout the entire Greco-Roman world.
Individual essays address such topics as how myths were presented in stories, poems, dramas and all forms of visual art, as well as the role of myth in philosophy, learning, religion, mystery-cult, and Greek self identity. Other essays explore contemporary reception of Greek myth and the potential of modern theoretical approaches. A Companion to Greek Mythology offers invaluable insights into the ancient world that will help to shape our understanding of the wide ranging appeal and influence of Greek myth across the ages.
About the Author
Ken Dowden is Professor of Classics and Director of the Institute of Archaeology & Antiquity at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of
Uses of Greek Mythology (1992),
European Paganism (2000), and
Zeus (2006).
Niall Livingstone is a Senior Lecturer in Classics at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of Isocrates’ Busiris (2001) and, with Gideon Nisbet, a forthcoming book on Greek epigrams.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations viii
List of Maps xi
List of Tables xii
Notes on Contributors xiii
To the Reader xviii
Acknowledgements xxi
Glossary xxii
Abbreviations xxv
Approaching Myth 1
1 Thinking through Myth, Thinking Myth Through 3
Ken Dowden and Niall Livingstone
PART I Establishing the Canon 25
2 Homer's Use of Myth 27
Françoise Létoublon
3 Telling the Mythology: From Hesiod to the Fifth Century 47
Ken Dowden
4 Orphic Mythology 73
Radcliffe G. Edmonds III
PART II Myth Performed, Myth Believed 107
5 Singing Myth: Pindar 109
Ian Rutherford
6 Instructing Myth: From Homer to the Sophists 125
Niall Livingstone
7 Acting Myth: Athenian Drama 141
Jean Alaux
8 Displaying Myth: The Visual Arts 157
Susan Woodford
9 Platonic 'Myths' 179
Penelope Murray
10 Myth in History 195
Alan Griffiths
PART III New Traditions 209
11 Myth and Hellenic Identities 211
Fritz Graf
12 Names and Places: Myth in Alexandria 227
Anatole Mori
13 The Myth of Rome 243
Matthew Fox
14 Displaying Myth for Roman Eyes 265
Zahra Newby
15 The Myth that Saves: Mysteries and Mysteriosophies 283
Ken Dowden
16 Myth and Death: Roman Mythological Sarcophagi 301
Zahra Newby
17 Myth in Christian Authors 319
Fritz Graf
PART IV Older Traditions 339
18 The Indo-European Background to Greek Mythology 341
Nicholas J. Allen
19 Near Eastern Mythologies 357
Alasdair Livingstone and Birgit Haskamp
20 Levantine, Egyptian, and Greek Mythological Conceptions of the Beyond 383
Nanno Marinatos and Nicolas Wyatt
PART V Interpretation 411
21 Interpreting Images: Mysteries, Mistakes, and Misunderstandings 413
Susan Woodford
22 The Myth of History: The Case of Troy 425
Dieter Hertel
23 Women and Myth 443
Sian Lewis
24 Mythology of the Black Land: Greek Myths and Egyptian Origins 459
Ian Rutherford
25 Psychoanalysis: The Wellspring of Myth? 471
Richard H. Armstrong
26 Initiation: The Key to Myth? 487
Ken Dowden
27 The Semiotics and Pragmatics of Myth 507
Claude Calame, translated by Ken Dowden
PART VI Conspectus 525
28 A Brief History of the Study of Greek Mythology 527
Jan N. Bremmer
Bibliography 549
Index of Texts Discussed 605
Index of Names 613
Index of Subjects 635