Παρουσίαση/Προβολή
Rewriting Biblical Myth in English Literature
(ENL285) - afroditi-maria panaghis
Περιγραφή Μαθήματος
University of Athens Fall 2013
Department of English Seventh Semester Instructor: Dr. A. M. Panaghis
Rewriting Biblical Myth in English Literature
The course deals with texts selected from across the spectrum of English literature: 15th century to the present, with the aim of underlining the reasons that prompted writers to rewrite biblical myths. To convey their social, political, and religious ideas, authors employed biblical myths in order to expose social tensions, point out political instability, analyze religious controversies, and explain wars. The works under review will show that both religious conformity as well as dissent not only played an important role in English politics it also influenced literature throughout the ages. The course will also outline the manner by which biblical myths provided alternative solutions to political deadlocked situations. Finally, the variety of texts (poetry, fiction, and drama) that will be examined will reveal the multiple literary techniques used by writers to blend biblical myths with their artistic vision.
Introduction
1. Theories of myth: Fraser, Eliade, Jung, Frye
2. Defining and outlining Biblical myth
i. Old Testament
ii. New Testament
iii. The Revelations
3. Principles of interpreting Biblical myth
1. Religious: Aquinas, St. Augustine
2. Philosophical: Platonism, Neo-Platonism
i. The Ideal versus reality
ii. Eden and the Golden age
iii. Christianized Platonic theory
iv. Theocentric versus homocentric
v. Virtue and morality
3. Psychological: Freud, Jung
i. Individuation
ii. Transformation
4. Socio-Political: Cassirer,White
i. Historical background
5. Artistic: Frye, Blake
4. Function of biblical myth in literature
1. Convey ideas
i. The concept of Truth
a. Biblical truth
b. Artistic truth
ii. The Chain of Being
iii. Macrocosm and Microcosm
iv. Divinity in man and nature
2. Comment on social events
3. Analyze religious controversies
i. Catholicism, Protestantism, etc.
ii. Religious conformity
iii. Religious dissent
4. Point out political instability: The Divine Right of Kings
5. Explain wars
6. Create a world vision
5. Pagan versus Christian myth
1. Classical heritage
2. Parallels
3. Similarities/dissimilarities
4. Borrowing and blending elements
5. Artistic vision based on Biblical myth
6. The function of symbolism
7. The function of allegory: literal, tropological (moral), anagogical
8. Typology as a system of exegesis
9. Typology and myth
10. The quest, pilgrimage, and encounter/union with the Divine
11. Religious concepts
i. Temptation, Sin, and Fall: Milton, Blake, Wilde
ii. Birth, Sacrifice, and Resurrection: “The Burning Babe,” “Sunset
on Calvary”
12. Myth as religion: The Holy Bible
13. Myth as ritual: J. Wesson, M. Eliade
14. Myth as a collection of truths: Doty
15. Myth and mysticism
16. Archetypal patterns
i. Paradise, Purgatory, Hell: Milton
17. Archetypal experiences:
i. Creation
ii. Initiation
iii. Death
iv. Rebirth and Return
18. Myths as themes:
i. The myth of creation: Milton, Traherne
ii. The myth of the Fall: Milton, Wilde
iii. The conflicting brothers: Byron’s Cain
iv. The myth of the Deluge: Noah’s Flood
v. The myth of David: Dryden, Smart
vi. The myth of Spiritual Death and Rebirth: Spenser, Crashaw,
Carlyle
vii. The myth of Sacrifice and Resurrection: “Sunset on Calvary,”
Herbert, Thomas, Yeats
Primary Reading:
1. Fifteenth-century:
“Sunset on Calvary”
“Adam Lay Bound”
The Chester Play of Noah's Flood
2. Sixteenth-century:
E. Spenser The Faerie Queene Book I (excerpts)
R. Southwell “The Burning Babe”
3. Seventeenth-century:
E. Cary The Tragedy of Miriam
J. Donne “The Ecstasy”
G. Herbert “Easter Wings,” “Love 3”
H. Vaughan “Regeneration,”
R. Crashaw “The Flaming Heart”
T. Traherne “Eden”
J. Milton Samson Agonistes
J. Dryden “Absalom and Achitophel” (excerpts)
J. Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress
4. Eighteenth-century:
S. Johnson Rasselas
5. Nineteenth century:
W. Blake “The Lamb,” “A Divine Image”
G. G. Byron Cain
G. Meredith “Lucifer in Starlight”
G. M. Hopkins “God's Grandeur,” “The Windhover”
O. Wilde Salome
6. Twentieth-century:
W. B. Yeats “Adam's Curse,” “The Second Coming”
T. S. Eliot “Journey of the Magi"
D.Thomas “There was a Saviour"
T. Hughes “Theology”
G. Greene The End of the Affair
Secondary Reading:
Critical theories: The Norton Anthology: Theory and Criticism
Plato: Ion, The Republic Bks. II, III, X
Plotinus: from the fifth Ennead
A. Jung: “On the Relation of Analytical Psychology to Poetry”
N. Frye: “The Archetypes of Literature”
T. Aquinas: Summa Theologica (excerpts)
St. Augustine: On Christian Doctrine (excerpts)
J. Baudrillard: ”The Precession of Simulacra”
H. White: “The Historical Text as Literary Artifact”
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Texts:
The Norton Anthology of English Literature: Vols. I & II
Pilgrim’s Progress
Salome
The End of the Affair
E-class materials.
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Ημερομηνία δημιουργίας
Παρασκευή 28 Σεπτεμβρίου 2012
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