Eastern Illinois University Course Proposal ENG 3009G, Myth and Culture

Similar documents
CFA 3301: The Dawn of Wisdom SMU-in-Taos, June, 2011 SYLLABUS

Greek Religion/Philosophy Background Founder biography Sacred Texts

TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS. LitPlan Teacher Pack for Mythology based on the book by Edith Hamilton

Course Outline General Education/ Area C4

AP Reading Guide for summer assignments. Edith Hamilton s Mythology

Faith and Culture in the Ancient Near East Wonders of Arabia

CLAS 170: Greek and Roman Mythology Summer Session II, 2015 Course Syllabus

Hebrew Studies 331: The Book of Genesis: Where It All Begins Professor David Brusin Office Hours by Appointment (414)

The rest of the Olympians were children of Zeus.

Mythology. Teacher Edition. Written by Rebecca Stark Illustrated by Karen Birchak and Nelsy Fontalvo

PUBLISHER S NOTE. xiii

Dear Incoming Students,

Pine Castle Christian Academy 7101 Lake Ellenor Dr., Orlando, FL (407) 313-PCCA (7222)

* The Dark Age of Greece ( B.C.) By the end of the 12 th century B.C. the Mycenaean's had vanished and Greece entered an undocumented dark age

Introduction to Hinduism THEO 282

Dear Incoming Students,

A Fresh Look at Its Importance and Reality

Exploring the Background: The Context of ROMANS

Introduction to Greek Mythology. Gender Unit Mod. Humanities/Grad. Project

Walton, John H. Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament: Introducing the

EASTERN ARIZONA COLLEGE The Development of Europe to 1650

The Epic of Gilgamesh: Grandeur, Despair and Realism.

Sisyphus Crimes and Punishment Greek Mythology

LABI College Bachelor Degree in Theology Program Learning Outcomes

Welcome Back! **Please make a note on your calendar, the reading homework for January 10 should be Books 11 AND 16.

FAMILY LIFE AND RELIGION

SEMESTER AT SEA COURSE SYLLABUS University of Virginia, Academic Sponsor

RS 100: Introduction to Religious Studies California State University, Northridge Fall 2014

Religious Studies 600 Critical Approaches to Religion Tuesday 8:45-10:45 Mark Csikszentmihályi,

10 th Honors World Literature Mythology Background Information

FACULTY OF LIBERAL ARTS AND PROFESSIONAL STUDIES HUMANITEIS DEPARTMENT AP/HUMA A

Religious Studies. The Writing Center. What this handout is about. Religious studies is an interdisciplinary field

Platt and Maloney High Schools 9 th Grade Summer Reading Requirement 2012


An archetype can be thought of as a super symbol and can take on many forms:

HONORS FRESHMAN ENGLISH

Syllabus for Approval

Iliad Background Notes and Literary Terms English II Pre-AP Greek Literature. Greek Gods and Goddesses

Basic Classes of Creation Myths

Department of Philosophy

POSSIBLE COURSES OFFERED - UNDERGRADUATE LEVEL MAJORS AND MINORS

Veda and the Vedas. Chapter 2 CHAPTER SUMMARY LEARNING OBJECTIVES TEACHING TIPS LECTURE GUIDE AND ASSET CORRELATION

CLASSICS (CLASSICS) Classics (CLASSICS) 1. CLASSICS 205 GREEK AND LATIN ORIGINS OF MEDICAL TERMS 3 credits. Enroll Info: None

Babeş-Bolyai University

RELIGIOUS STUDIES (REL)

AP English Literature and Composition Summer Reading Assignment Ms. Wayne

The EMC Masterpiece Series, Literature and the Language Arts

The Epic Of Gilgamesh PDF

Arrogance- Loss- Bereavement-Wisdom. The Epic of Gilgamesh A spiritual journey from youth to maturity

ANS 301R [31160], CTI 310 [33385], R S 302 [43080] HISTORY OF THE RELIGIONS OF ASIA Spring Joel Brereton

Daniel DeMaiolo Reading Journal 1 The Epic of Gilgamesh, one of the earliest recorded stories, depicts incredible

HUMANITIES AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES

Lessons of Jung's Encounter with Native Americans

MYTHIC DIMENSIONS OF MODERN LIFE. Course Syllabus Lafayette Library, Spring 2018 Tuesdays, 10 am to 12 pm April 3 May 8

Wake Forest University School of Divinity Myth and Scripture: Genesis 1 11 Professor Neal Walls

AUCLA 102 Greek and Roman Mythology

STAR MYTHS WORLD OF THE VOLUME TWO

Why Ovid s Metamorphoses?

CERRITOS COLLEGE. Norwalk, California COURSE OUTLINE ENGLISH 221A LITERATURE IN THE BIBLE: HEBREW SCRIPTURES

The Marks of Faithful and Effective Authorized Ministers of the United Church of Christ AN ASSESSMENT RUBRIC

Gods and Goddesses. believed to have granted gifts to mankind: Monotheism: the belief or worship of one god or goddess

UNIT 5. The myths we live by

Philosophy and Values Breadth Spring 2018

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES

Syllabus for THE 470 Philosophy of Religion 3.0 Credit Hours Fall The major goals are to enable the student to do the following:

God and Mankind: Comparative Religions

Thinking in Narrative: Seeing Through To the Myth in Philosophy. By Joe Muszynski

Religious S t udies. Fa l l 2003

College of Arts and Sciences

CALVIN COLLEGE CATEGORY I

Religion 101: Gods, Myths, and Religions in a Secular Age

Mythology. Need to access completely for Ebook PDF mythology

Near Eastern Studies. Overview. Undergraduate Programs. Graduate Programs. Libraries. Select a subject to view courses. Arabic

Introduction. Cambridge University Press Myth, Ritual and the Oral Jack Goody Excerpt More information

Illustrated by Karen Birchak

Graduate Studies in Theology

Gods, Heroes, and Monsters: A Sourcebook of Greek, Roman, and Near Eastern Myths in Translation

JEFFERSON COLLEGE. 3 Credit Hours

The Search for Meaning PHIL 180 University Studies Program. Course Outline

PHILOSOPHY-PHIL (PHIL)

The Gospel According To Paul: Romans. Maurice W. Lusk, lll

Department of Near and Middle Eastern Studies

WORLD LITERATURE MAN, MYTH, MEANING A MYTHOLOGICAL / ARCHETYPAL APPROACH

2 Day 1: Mesopotamia and Sumer The Great Hymn to Shamash Hammurabi Code of Laws (Excerpts) Exodus 20-23

C E R R I T O S C O L L E G E. Norwalk, California COURSE OUTLINE ENGLISH 221B LITERATURE IN THE BIBLE: CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES

SYLLABUS SF I. Course Description Envisioning Human Existence. Schedule of Readings, Lectures, and Discussions

Chapter 11: Cultural Contributions 775 B.C.-338 B.C.

M.A./Ph.D. Program in Mythological Studies

Gilgamesh (Looking At Mesopotamian Myths And Legends) By Irving Finkel

Nazarene Theological Seminary 1700 E Meyer Blvd Kansas City, MO /

The Emergence of Judaism How to Teach this Course/How to Teach this Book

World Literature. Month Content Skills August VOCABULARY: LEVEL G. Identify and analyze new terminology Apply in a variety of situations

REL/JSP 200: The Early History of God Syracuse University Spring 2016 Whitman 003 T/Th 12:30-1:50

What is Civilization?

Unit 1 Guided Notes The Epic and Epic Heroes

Ancient and Medieval. Studies 165, Fall 2013

Myths in the Bible and Their Genetic Relationship to Indo-European Parallels: What Do They Mean?

The Gods and Goddesses of Olympus

The Hemet Unified School District HISTORY/SOCIAL SCIENCE Content Standards In the Classroom

History 500 Christianity and Judaism in Greco-Roman Antiquity Spring 2016

Transcription:

Eastern Illinois University Course Proposal ENG 3009G, Myth and Culture 1. Catalog Description a) ENG 3009G b) Myth and Culture c) 3-0-3 d) F,S e) Myth/Culture f) Through comparative analysis of myths from selected cultural traditions, the course will examine relationships among mythical, historical, anthropological and scientific ways of understanding. g) Prerequisites: English 1001G and English 1002G. h) English 3009G is a writing -intensive course. 2. Student Learning Objectives a) In successfully completing English 3009G, students will 1) enhance their reading and writing skills through confronting alien texts (literacy) 2) assimilate, synthesize, and articulate information from primary texts and scholarly sources of various disciplines (writing, critical thinking) 3) develop independent, critical thought through comparative analyses of various mythologies (critical thinking) 4) learn how all human action is social action and calls for a mythically informed sensibility (citizenship) 5) read myths from widely diverse cultures Middle Eastern, Hindu, Mayan, Navajo, Greco-Roman, Judeo-Christian and come to recognize the complexity of global diversity (critical thinking, citizenship) 6) enforce and develop their writing skills through completing writing assignments throughout the course 7) participate in class discussions (speaking). b) In fulfilling additional, course -specific learning objectives, students will 1) explore the nature of intellectual and aesthetic matters related to the study of literature 2) consider the value of expression and creativity, especially in literature and literary analysis 3. Course Outline: English 3009G is divided into 10 units, to be distributed evenly during a 15- week/50-minute course (45 classes) or a 15-week/ 75-minute course (30 classes). Week 1. Contexts and Frames Clifford Geertz, Local Knowledge (LK): Blurred Genres: The Refiguration of Social Thought Found in Translation: On the Social History of the Moral Imagination Claude Levi-Strauss, Myth and Meaning (MM):

2 The Meeting of Myth and Science ; Primitive Thinking and the Civilized Mind ; When Myth Becomes History Joseph Campbell, Myths to Live By (MLB): The Impact of Science on Myth ; The Emergence of Mankind Ernst Cassirer, Language and Myth (LM): The Place of Language and Myth in the Pattern of Human Culture Discussion: Comparison of perspectives and methods: interpretive anthropological (LK), structuralist (MM), archetypal (MLB) and symbolist (LM) approaches to myth studies. Assumptions and experience student premises for developing working definitions of myth, religion, history and science. What world through whose eyes? Journal responses; working definitions (1-2 pp) Weeks 2-3. Week 4. Weeks 5-6. Middle Eastern Mythology S. H. Hooke, Middle Eastern Mythology Geertz, LK: Common Sense as a Cultural System ; Art as a Cultural System Cassirer, LM: The Evolution of Religious Ideas ; Language and Conception Discussion: Mesopotamian (Sumerian and Babylonian), Egyptian, Ugaritic and Hittite mythologies. Types of myth ritual, origin, cult, prestige and eschatological concepts. Diffusion and disintegration of myths. Anything familiar here? The Epic of Gilgamesh Journal responses; short essay analysis of one myth, using perspective in LK, MM or LM 2-3 pp. N. K. Sanders, The Epic of Gilgamesh Geertz, LK: Centers, Kings, and Charisma: Reflections of the Symbolics of Power Cassirer, LM: Word Magic Discussion: The quest for immortality. Friendship with the "other," the "wild" man. Searching for power, the power of the search--heroic identity through struggle. An early flood myth. Death, sleep and the uses of the dream and the name. The role of archaeology--cuneiform and tablets. Of what importance when I know what I know? Journal responses; submit questions for mid-term. Greek and Roman Mythology Philip Mayerson, Classical Mythology in Literature, Art, and Music Discussion: Cosmogony and Theogony. Allegorical and "natural" deities. Prometheus and Zeus. Matriarchy and Mycenaean culture, patriarchy and Dorian culture. Zeus and counterparts in other religions. Hera (Juno), Poseidon (Neptune), Demeter (Ceres), Persephone, Apollo, Dionysus (Bacchus), Artemis (Diana), Athena (Minerva), Ares (Mars), Aphrodite (Venus), Hermes (Mercury), Hades

3 (Pluto), Orpheus, Perseus, Heracles (Hercules), Daedulus, Cadmus, Oedipus and Theseus. The uses of cultural legacy-gender, class and art. What are the games of gods? Journal responses; short essay--compare one god to a contemporary leader or analyze a contemporary event from the point of view of a Greek myth, 2-3 pp; identification and short essay examination; submit questions for the mid-term. Week 7. Week 8. Looking for the World through Mythic Senses Robert Fitzgerald, trans., The Odyssey Discussion: The heroic quest. Disorientation and dislocation. Rational inquiry and intuitive risks. University education as an odyssey. Class and gender, the crew and Penelope. Deceit and desire. Memory and imagination. Is it impossible to get back home? Journal responses; study questions; take-home mid-term essay examination. Hebrew and Christian Mythology Hooke, Middle Eastern Mythology Cassirer, LM: "The Successive Phases of Religious Thought" Thorleif Borman, Hebrew Thought Compared with Greek (reserve reading) Discussion: Creation myth. Cain and Abel. The flood and the tower of Babel. Cult myths. Joshua. The ark. The Elijah and Elisha myths. Apocalyptic myths (Daniel). Birth and resurrection narratives. Comparison of Hellenic and Hebrew traditions; dynamic and static thought, language, collective concepts, time and space, symbolism and instrumentalism, logical thinking and psychological understanding, and historical thinking. What do I know now that I did not know that I knew? Journal responses; short reaction essay (1-2 pp) Weeks 9-10. Hindu Mythology Wendy O'Flaherty, trans., Hindu Myths Campbell, MLB: "The Separation of East and West"; "The Confrontation of East and West in Religion"; "The Inspiration of Oriental Art"; "Zen" Discussion: Prajapati and Brahma. Indra and Angi, Rudra and Siva. Vishnu and the avatars Rama and Sita, the Buddha and Kalkin. Devi, the goddess. gods and demons. Reincarnation and immortality. Journal responses; submit questions for the final; short essay--a) if god were a woman, then... or b) if you were the Devi, then... (2-3 pp)

4 Weeks 11-12. Northern European Mythology H. R Ellis Davidson, Gods and Myths of Northern Europe M. Magnusson and H. Palsson, The Vinland Sagas: The Norse Discovery of America Cassirer, LM: "The Power of Metaphor" Discussion: The Prose Edda. Odin and the gods of battle. Thor, Freyr and the gods of peace and prosperity. Gods of the sea, gods of the dead. Twin gods--bragi and Idun, Mimir and Hoenir. Loki and Balder. The world tree, creation and destruction. How do old gods die? Weeks 13-14. Native American (New World) Mythology Journal responses; submit questions for final; short essay (2-3 pp) comparing one god from Northern Europe with one from the Greeks or from the Hindus. Dennis Tedlock, trans., Popul Vuh Paul Zolbrod, trans. Dine Bahane Cheyenne origin myth (handout) Cheyenne wheel of law (handout) Acoma Pueblo origin myth (handout) Discussion: Mayan creation epic--the "daykeepers," diviners of the distance between sky and body. Navajo creation epic. Use of contemporary informants to reconstruct ancient texts. Cheyenne earth-diver myth; myth, ecology and law. Acoma emergence myth. What ghosts grow in the corn? Journal responses; submit questions for final; short essay (2-3 pp) comparing Hebrew/Christian mythology with Native American mythology. Week 15. Mythology and the Modern Mind Reading: Geertz, LK: "The Way We Think Now: Toward an Ethnography of Modern Thought"; "Local Knowledge: Fact and Law in Comparative Perspective" Discussion: Law and myth as local knowledge--gender, class, time, place and varied issues--civility and religion. Expanding modes of discourse in film and television, from Sergeant Friday to Judge Wapner, from facts to precedent and pattern. Accents of characterization and narration, imaginings of particular place in particular time about particular things by particular peoples--meanings, not machines. How shall we dance when it rains in the mind and what shall we plant? Journal responses; submit question for final. 4. Evaluation of student learning a) Achievement of student leaning will be evaluated based on the following: written response journal (20%) short essays, at least one with revision (35%) mid-term essay examination (10%) final essay examination (20%) discussion/participation (15%)

5 b) English 3009G satisfies the criteria for a writing- intensive course. 5. Rationale a) English 3009G will be in the Humanities segment of the General Education program. In this course, students will use methods of critical and comparative analysis in order to examine the role of mythology in shaping, nurturing and proscribing cultural transformation from a variety of selected Western and non-western cultures b) Prerequisites: ENG 1001G, 1002G. c) This course does not duplicate any current offerings. 6. Implementation a) The course will be taught be members of the English Department. b) Texts: Acoma origin myth (handout) Boman, Thorleif. Hebrew Thought Compared with Greek. 1960; rpt. Norton, 1970. (reserve reading) Campbell, Joseph. Myths to Live By. Bantam, 1973. Cassirer, Ernst. Language and Myth. Trans. Susanne Langer. 1946; rpt. Dover, 1953. Cheyenne origin myth (handout) Cheyenne wheel of law (handout) Davidson, H. R. Ellis. Gods and Myths of Northern Europe. Penguin, 1974. Geertz, Clifford. Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive Anthropology. Basic, 1983. Hooke, S. H. Middle Eastern Mythology. Penguin, 1963. Levi-Strauss, Claude. Myth and Meaning. U of Toronto P, 1978. Magnusson, Magnus and Hermann Palsson, trans. The Vinland Sagas: The Norse Discovery of America. Penguin, 1965. Mayerson, Philip. Classical Mythology in Literature, Art and Music. Xerox, 1971. O'Flaherty, Wendy, trans. Hindu Myths. Penguin, 1975. Sandars, N. K., trans. The Epic of Gilgamesh. Penguin, 1960. [A new translation by Maureen G. Kovacs, published by Stanford UP, may be substituted, if available in paper.] Tedlock, Dennis, trans. Popul Vuh: The Definitive Edition of the Mayan Book of the Dawn of Life and the Glories of Gods and Kings. Simon and Schuster, 1985. Zolbrod, Paul. Dine Bahane: The Navajo Creation Story. U of New Mexico, 1988. c) There will be no supplementary materials or laboratory experiences required. d) English 3009G will first be offered in Fall 2000. 7. Community College Transfer A community college course may not be judged equivalent to this course. 8. Date Approved by Department: 10 April, 2000 9. Date approved by CAHCC: 19 April, 2000 10. Date approved by CAA: 19 October, 2000 Departmental Contact Person: Dana Ringuette @ 217-581-2428