Mythology & Folklore

It's easy to dismiss myths simply as lies. After all, did Apollo really pull the Sun around in a chariot? Did Coyote really create the Indian tribes by flinging a defeated monster in several directions? Did Onamuji really die twice and have to be rescued by his mother? Who on earth is Onamuji? As children of the Enlightenment we have little patience for such absurd stories, condescendingly studying them (if we pay attention at all) as artifacts of primitive societies, or simply transforming them into comic book adventures.

Which is probably exactly what most of the originators of the myths would have wanted, at least the comic book part. As the great Roman poet Ovid demonstrated in his masterful Metamorphoses, myths aren't about telling what actually happened or describing the physical realities of the world so much as they're concerned with renewal, transfiguration and change.

There is a sense in which myths are intended to explain some perplexing aspect of the known world, as when the Scandinavians attributed lightning and thunder to Thor charging around in his goat-drawn chariot. But there's another sense in which it didn't really matter if they believed the stories they told at religious gatherings or by the fire at night; the mythologies of the Greeks, Chinese, Sioux tribes, Congolese and Slavs were all intended to impart to their listeners particular ideas about the world, about justice, about life and death, and about themselves.

Postmodernists like to call this sort of thing metanarrative, a universal story that imparts meaning on the chaos of existence. Men like G.K. Chesterton and J.R.R. Tolkien preferred to call it a search for truth. It was in this sense that Chesterton called the Christian Gospel a Myth—not because it was in any sense not true; quite the opposite, because it is perfectly true. Old mythologies worked hard to discover truth, while the Christian myth (the only completely true myth, as C.S. Lewis would say) is truth.

This is not to undermine the Christian narrative as found in the Bible, nor is it to apotheosize the ancient myths. There's plenty the old mythologists got wrong, and nothing untrue in the Word of God. Not only that, whereas the old myths are complete fabrications, the narrative of Scripture presents real historical events that actually transpired.

What is also true, however, and what is often ignored, is that what the Bible does for real, the myth-writers were trying to do. They wanted understanding, and the often bizarre stories they conjured weren't weird for the sake of weirdness: they were attempts at building a framework that would make sense of everything they knew existed, its origins, and its ultimate destiny.

Folklore shares a similar goal, though it's generally less universal, more homespun and culture-specific. Zeus is a mythic figure; Paul Bunyan is a folk hero. The folk hero is generally a national symbol, a human distillation of the peoples' spirit, someone they can identify with while looking up to them at the same time. Mythology and folklore often merge, especially in places with a long and deep heritage. The United States has no mythology, but its people have developed a rich folklore to make up for it.

At its best, mythology promotes noble conduct, self-sacrifice, and peacefulness. At its worst, it depicts a universe at the hands of capricious deities with appetites only different from ours in that they're bigger, more depraved, more destructive. We don't suggest building a worldview out of ancient myths, but if you have any desire to understand how people of the past thought and what motivated them, we do suggest starting with their stories.

Review by C. Hollis Crossman
C. Hollis Crossman used to be a child. Now he's a husband and father who loves church, good food, and weird stuff. He might be a mythical creature, but he's definitely not a centaur. Read more of his reviews here.
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Adventures of Robin Hood
Reader's Digest World's Best Reading
by Paul Creswick, illustrated by N. C. Wyeth
1991 Edition from Reader's Digest
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$8.00 (3 in stock)
Aeneid
by Virgil, translated by Robert Fitzgerald
from Vintage Classics
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Annotated Hans Christian Andersen
by Hans Christian Andersen
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Arctic Twilight
by Samuli Paulaharju
1982 Edition from Finnish American Literary Heritage Foundation
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Argosy of Fables
by F. T. Cooper (editor), illustrated by Paul Bransom
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Aztec and Maya Myths
by Karl Taube
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Diamond Path
Time-Life Myth & Mankind
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Egypt: Gods, Myths and Religion
by Lucia Gahlin
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$8.00 (1 in stock)
Eternal Cycle
Time-Life Myth & Mankind
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$4.00 (1 in stock)
Favorite Folktales from Around the World
by Jane Yolen
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$9.00 (1 in stock)
Fierce Wars and Faithful Loves
by Roy Maynard & Edmund Spenser
from Canon Press
Allegory/Epic Poetry for 10th-Adult
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First Houses: Native American Homes and Sacred Structures
by Jean Guard Monroe, Ray A. Williamson, illustrated by Susan Johnston Carlson
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$5.00 (1 in stock)
Glittering Plain
by William Morris
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$6.00 (1 in stock)
Gods of Sun & Sacrifice
Time-Life Myth & Mankind
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Great Folktales of Old Ireland
by Mary McGarry, illustrated by Richard Hook
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History of the Kings of Britain
Penguin Classics
by Geoffrey of Monmouth
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Johnny Appleseed
by Robert Price
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Journeys through Dreamtime
Time-Life Myth & Mankind
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Land of the Dragon
Time-Life Myth & Mankind
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Le Morte d'Arthur
Signet Classics
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Little Prince
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Fantasy for 3rd-Adult
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Little Prince
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Little Prince
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Fantasy for 3rd-Adult
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Lost Realms of Gold
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Mother Earth, Father Sky
Time-Life Myth & Mankind
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Odyssey
by Homer
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Odyssey & Guide - 2 book set
by Homer
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Purloining of Prince Oleomargarine
by Mark Twain & Philip Stead
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Realm of the Rising Sun
Time-Life Myth & Mankind
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Romance of King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table (abridged)
by Sir Thomas Mallory, illustrated by Arthur Rackham
from Weathervane Books
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$12.00 (1 in stock)
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
by Anonymous, translated by Jessie L. Weston
from Dover Publications
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$4.00 (1 in stock)
Song of Hiawatha
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, illustrated by Frederic Remington
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Song of the Cid
by Anonymous
Dual Language from Penguin Classics
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Tales from Shakespeare
by Richard Armour
from Penguin Classics
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Treasury of Classical Mythology
by A. R. H. Moncrieff
from Barnes & Noble
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Twice-Told Tales
Reader's Digest World's Best Reading
by Nathaniel Hawthorne
1st THUS from Reader's Digest
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Way to Eternity
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