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LOGICS OF MYTH
Creation Myths around the World Genesis 1: The first creation of the Bible Enuma Elish: Babylonian Creation
ARISTOTLE
Books by Stefan Stenudd:
![]() Cosmos of the Ancients
The Greek philosophers' theories about the gods, the myths, and cosmology, by Stefan Stenudd.
More about the book here. ![]() Life Energy Encyclopedia
by Stefan Stenudd. Qi, prana, spirit, and other life forces around the world explained and compared.
See the book at Amazon. ![]() Tao Te Ching
The Taoism of Lao Tzu Explained. The great Chinese classic, translated and extensively commented by Stefan Stenudd.
See the book at Amazon. ![]() Occasionally I Contemplate Murder
Thoughts on life, death, and the meaning of it all, by Stefan Stenudd.
More about the book here. ![]() Qi
Increase your life energy, by Stefan Stenudd. The life energy qi (also chi or ki), with exercises on how to awaken, increase, and use it.
See the book at Amazon. |
The Logics of MythBasic Patterns of Creation Myths3 Dramaturgy in creation myths
ne might wonder why it should be necessary to go through all the above definitions of stories, tales and myths, when aiming to examine the structures of cosmogony in creation myths. An alternative approach would be to extract the cosmological fragments and statements in creation myths as well as other forms of mythology, religious traditions and all kinds of tales. Then there would be no need for any analysis of the form of the stories.In the case of creation, though, this must take the form of a story, since it consists of events taking place in a fixed order through time. No matter how rhapsodical, a cosmogony is always in the form of a story - first this happens, then that, and in almost every case one thing leads to the next, if not in an explicit order of cause and effect, so definitely in tight relations of some kind in this chain of events. Therefore, cosmogony is not meaningfully extracted from the story of it - nothing of its cosmological workings would remain.
Whatever interpretation chosen, it needs to consider the workings of a story, and would not make the same sense extracted from the story concept. An even more valuable instrument is the story-based analysis in such a way that it can often point out where a myth has been corrupted or misses a part. If, in the seven day rhapsody of Genesis, God would do nothing at all on, say, the fourth day, or there would be no mentioning of that day, we could safely assume that the version of the tale we have is not the correct one - and this we surmise from the inner workings of stories, alone.
Then, where would such a missing part fit in? The story moves on nicely with Adam and Eve, all the way to when they are thrown out of the garden of Eden. So far there is, so to speak, no fourth day missing. Every character in the story has its clear role, and events take place in an orderly fashion, one thing leading to the next. But then, with the start of the fourth chapter of Genesis, the stringency of the story is somewhat lost. Now Adam knew Eve his wife, and she conceived and bore Cain, saying, "I have gotten a man with the help of the LORD." And again, she bore his brother Abel. Now Abel was a keeper of sheep, and Cain a tiller of the ground. In the course of time Cain brought to the LORD an offering of the fruit of the ground, and Abel brought of the firstlings of his flock and of their fat portions. And the LORD had regard for Abel and his offering, but for Cain and his offering he had no regard. One might wonder why God prefers one sacrifice to the other, but even more puzzling is his carefree meddling with the affairs of creatures he has just thrown out of Eden. There is nothing in the former chapter explaining what kind of a relation He now has to the human beings, his only clear link to them being Adam and Eve of his own creation.
With this the fourth chapter ends, and the fifth starts with a short recapitulation, mentioning the age of Adam upon his death, and his offspring, generation after generation. This simple catalogue of generations stops only at Noah, where the next elaborate story begins.
In the story of Cain it is appalling that Adam and Eve have no roles at all in it, although it is their son slaying their other son. Would they not call upon God and demand of Him to punish Cain, and would they not ask of God to bless them with a new son in Abel's place? They would at least do something, but none is mentioned. After giving birth to Cain and Abel, nothing until Cain is gone and they give birth to another son, after which they again contribute nothing to the story. Dramaturgically, then, Adam and Eve are not at all needed in the story about Cain, as they add nothing to it but the fact that any man must have parents, which we would have surmised even if they had not been mentioned. In other words, Cain and Abel would not need to be the sons of the very first couple, since there is nothing in the story implying that this would have baring on the story, no reference to either the events in Eden or the characters of Adam and Eve in what follows. Cain slaying his brother is just as terrible, whatever generation after Adam and Eve they would belong to.
The story of Noah has striking similarities to that of Adam - where Adam is first to name the animals, Noah preserves them from the flood, where Adam's sons people the earth, so do - anew - the sons of Noah. There is even a son of Noah condemned, although this time the son's sin is no worse than having seen his father's nakedness. Finally, after the expulsion of Noah's son, there is a quick listing of generations to come, similar to that following the fate of Cain, this time to halt at Abram.
We cannot take for granted that all myths are created with a dramaturgical awareness as cunning as that of the ancient Athenians. Instead, we must - where a myth does not clearly indicate additional sophistication - find some basic rules of dramaturgy, which any myth can be expected to obey. In the case of creation myths this may become even more tricky than in a myth of adventure, since the former is an explanatory myth, thereby having a focus on something much more abstract, not to say alienated, than what is the case with most tales of heroic adventures. Therefore, I will in the following extract only such dramaturgical rules which would also apply to creation myths. It is possible that for myths of adventure, the dramaturgical structure can be made more complex and precise.
In between the starting and stopping point of the creation myth, there has to be a series of events, meaningfully linked to each other - if not in the sense of one event naturally and directly causing the next, so in any case a relevance existing between them, a relation of sorts, a thread running through them all. When one event is followed by another, there should be some way of grasping that the two events have or will have something to do with one another.
The end of the story is easier to determine - the seventh day, when God pauses. His work is done, he has created the world and all of its inhabitants, including man. This is a logical finale in any creation myth - the moment where the world is made into the shape it is perceived to remain ever since. The story may very well go on, as it does in the bible, with all kinds of adventures and complications, but if the world does not change in any significant way, the period of creation is over, and so is the myth of it.
To this category one might easily sort the story of Noah and the flood, in spite of its re-creation theme. Nothing significant has changed from before the flood to after it. Same world, and soon enough same sinful, weak-minded creatures peopling it. The only explanatory ingredient in the story is the rainbow, said to be created as a sort of God's signature to his promise never again to let this disaster befall on his people - and it can be discussed, by the way, how dependable this promise has proven to be, which might be the reason for the signature being of such an elusive nature. Anyway, the rainbow is not a myth, but a mythical object of cosmological kind, and not even a very prominent one in the story at that.
The characters - of whatever nature - need to have some recognizable relations to one another, be connected in some way, similar to how the events of the story need to be linked. In the case of a creation story there is also a need for the major characters - if not for all of them - to have some clear functions in the making of the world, or there would not have been an incentive for them to appear at all on a stage as sparse as the world in its beginning must be.
The relation between the characters and the events of a creation myth must be such, that either the characters are instrumental in the making of the world, or they are affected by it. In case of the former, they need to express some incentive, an urge or wish or ambition, leading to their creative action, by which they will reach, feel or accomplish something of significance to themselves. In case of the latter, they will be affected by the world creation to such an extent, that they will not be the same afterwards.
"Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters", states the first version, and who would not be lonely in such a desolate setting? There he hovers, God's spirit, before he suddenly exclaims: "Let there be light!" Who would not?
Just as in any tragic drama, there are reasons for this sad outcome to be found in the behavior of the one suffering it. God has forbidden his playmates to eat the fruits of knowledge and life, which would combined make them his equals. He had made them in his image, but not the real thing. In keeping this distance to them, how could he be but deserted? In his superiority, he wanted to remain unique - all alone - so he must be just that in every other aspect too. The moral of the story would, with different characters in the roles, be highly appreciated material for Sunday school.
This rule without exceptions may be understood by what dramaturgy calls the premise - at the very starting point of the drama, a lot of basics about it are established, which may be called the cosmology of the drama, its natural laws of sorts. For the audience to accept what is later to take place in it, a drama must initially establish what laws apply, what correlations have relevance, what information is or is not needed to understand it. In this way, a drama becomes a closed room, with all essential ingredients of it already present at the beginning. That is why explanations to what happens in it must always be possible to find within its setting, among its ingredients. In this sense, there can be no loose ends. In a myth portraying the drama of world creation, the same limitations apply. Dramaturgical rules of a creation myth:
NextTime-space dimensions of creation myths |
Stefan Stenudd
![]() About me
I'm a Swedish writer and historian of ideas, researching the thought patterns and cosmology in creation myths. I've also written books about ancient Chinese and Japanese traditions, as well as fiction. |