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  • 1
    ISBN: 9781785272837
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Resource (145 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 302.2223
    Keywords: Symbolism in art History ; Mythology ; Civilization, Modern ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Why do people queue up and break the bank to watch fantasy movies? Why do some fictional characters and mythical creatures arrest our mind and senses? Why do some images and tales affect us so deeply, so much so that we see them all around and inside us? From heroic journeys to uncanny feelings to invincible goddesses, _Symbols and Myth- Making in Modernity_ investigates the metaphoric power of symbols in human imagination today and in the past. The book traces how ever-present cross-cultural symbols, residing in ancient rites, masterpieces of Renaissance, Sufi poetry, religion and myths, erupt in popular culture today, including in cinema, books, visual art, music and politics. The book unpacks a post-Jungian, phenomenological theory of deep culture that nourishes human perception of reality through symbols and myths. It describes how complex symbols such as those in ancient myths, religions or modern popular culture should be seen as multivalent, irreplaceable, shared to the extent that they carry significance across cultures and times and pointing to interiority or inner transformation, including as compensation or as affirmation. Moreover, the most popular and common symbols are not fantasized by individuals but are rather grasped or intuited from the culture they live in. Symbols are manifest in popular culture yet simultaneously hidden so that their significance becomes apparent only with appropriate conceptual lenses which carries signification beyond the literal object itself. Art and rituals are the societal vessels that disclose the depth of the symbol and its relevance to daily life. Symbols have always been situated within a system of meaning _ a mytho-logia. But moderns have largely lost conscious access to a mythology. This offers mythology for our time, illustrating its relevance in modern rituals of popular movies, religion and politics. Dismantling literalism and disturbing our view of the world, at each step the book unpacks how people relate to the world through symbols, how symbols play out in the modern world, and the work they do in transforming the self. At the same time, deep culture is helpful in pointing to ruptures _ where modern myths stumble _ thereby leading to new analyses of emerging societal crises and identifying new potential solutions.
    Description / Table of Contents: Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction: Culture Is Deep -- Myth and Modernity: Toward a Deeper View of Culture -- Popular/Culture -- Mything the World and the Self -- "Action!": Ritual and Art -- Symbol -- Statement -- Method -- Structure of the Book -- 2. Complex Transformations of the Self: The Hero as a Symbol -- Revisiting Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand Faces -- Brains, brawn, and break-up: Odysseus's transformative return -- Psyche and the journey of the soul -- Modern Masks: Vogler's Journey -- Star Wars: Rey and her (incomplete) journey -- Transformation, Complexity, and Gender: Heroes Ancient and Modern -- Discussion: Living the Hero -- 3. The Uncanny: Monsters, Blood, and Other 3: A.M. Horrors -- Introduction to the Self -- The Uncanny -- Shake Us to Wake Us -- Here there be monsters -- Ghosts and demons: "Please allow me to introduce myself" -- Threatening aliens and artificial intelligence -- The Uncanny in Myth: Death, Dismemberment, and Rebirth -- Blood and Wine: The Uncanny in Ritual -- Blood and wine in Eastern Orthodox Christianity -- Wine and blood in qawwali music -- Discussion: Disquiet in the Cultural Operating System -- 4. The Feminine: Citadel of Metaphors -- The Symbolic Feminine -- Polarity -- Birthing and containing -- Containing and devouring -- Modern expressions -- Many Shades of Gray -- Old witch -- Young witch and Sophia -- Medusa -- Singularity versus Multiplicity -- Artemis: goddess of modernity -- Demeter and Persephone -- The Matrix and Pirates of the Caribbean -- Discussion: The Symbolic Feminine in Deep Culture -- 5. It's culture all the way down -- Introduction -- Intercultural and Interreligious Dialogue: The Symbolic Dimension -- Fish -- Chalice -- Toward imaginal dialogue.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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