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Greek Mythology : An Introduction

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Allegorists in ancient Greece attempted to find philosophical and physical truths in myth.

Plato, who resolutely excluded myths from the sphere of truth, thought that they could express ideas in a realm he could not reach with dialectical reasoning.

Freud built a science around the myth of Oedipus, saying that myths were "distorted wish dreams of entire nations, the dreams of early mankind".

No body of myth has served more purposes - or been subject to more analysis - than Greek mythology.

This is a revised translation of Fritz Graf's acclaimed introduction to Greek mythology, "Griechische Mythologie: Eine Einfuehrung", originally published in 1985 by Artemis Verlag.

Graf offers a chronological account of the principal Greek myths that appear in the surviving literary and artistic sources, and concurrently documents the history of interpretation of Greek mythology from the 17th century to the present. First surveying the various definitions of myth that have been advanced, Graf proceeds to look at the relationship between Greek myths and epic poetry; the absence of an "origin of man" myth in Greek mythology; the connection between particular myths and shrines or holy festivals; the harmony in Greek literature becween myth and history; the use of myth in Greek song and tragedy; and the uses and interpretations of myth by philosophers and allegorists.

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£32.00
Product Details
0801846579 / 9780801846571
Hardback
292.1
27/12/1993
United States
264 pages, 12 Illustrations, black and white
140 x 216 mm, 510 grams