Showing posts with label sparagamos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sparagamos. Show all posts

Friday, March 11, 2011

Orpheus (Ch 16)


Etymology: N/a
Geographic Association: Withdraws to Thrace after the loss of Eurydice.
Origin: Apollo + Calliope (muse of Music)/Oeagrus (Thracian River God) + Calliope
Claim to Fame: Beautiful voice and lyre-playing, can soothe the beastliest of beasts, can make the inanimate animate. Tragic love story. Archetype of poet/musician.
Literature: Ovid's Metamorphosis, Vergil's Georgics,

Underworld Myth
Orpheus is married to Eurydice, a dryad (wood-nymph), but on their wedding night Eurydice dies from a snake bite. Orpheus is determined to bring her back, so he descends to the underworld, using his musical skill to charm the gatekeepers into letting him in. He performs for Hades and Persephone who allow him to take Eurydice home on the condition that he does not look back. Overcome with yearning, he glances back once and she is taken from him forever.
Inconsolable, Orpheus retreats to Thrace with only music as his solace (chooses music over women, ie. Apollo, in the land of Dionysus). When he rejects the Maenads, they slaughter him, consume his flesh, and scatter his remains in the Hebrus River. It is said that his head kept singing and prophetizing, and his  lyre kept playing, while he was united in spirit with his beloved in death.

Orphism (6th C. BCE)
Claimed as a prophet and a religious teacher, a hero-cult is established by his son Musaeus based on music, magic, and prophecy - worshipping both Apollo and Dionysus. In 5th C. BCE, Orphism becomes accepted as a mystery religion.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Dionysus (Ch 13)


Etymology and Epithets:
     (g.) Dionysus,  Dio (connection to I.E. Sky God) + nysus ("son of")
     (l.) Bacchus
     Dionysus Lysios, "the deliverer", empowers one with a state of total irresponsibility, group identity
Domain: Thrace, Phrygia (Asia Minor/Modern Turkey/Near East) and/or a party
Genealogy: Zeus + Semele
Claim to Fame: God of wine (grapes, fermentation), drunkenness, madness, ecstasy, fertility  
     (complement to Magna Mater figure, whereby she is "dry earth" he is "fluid earth"). Constant
     assertion of divinity, always an outsider, wild cult following
Iconography: Grapes, cantheros, ivy, panther skin, thyrsus (pole wrapped with ivy, topped with
     pinecone), satyrs, fauns, sileni, usually bearded, maenads.
Literature: Euripedes' Bacchae, Homeric Hymn to Dionysus

Myths
I. Birth - (Preface) Zeus + Persephone = Zagreus, but Hera has the titans dismember and devour the child. Athena manages to rescue the heart and gives it to Zeus, who swallows it before destroying the Titans. Becomes the foundation for Orphic Religion, whereby humans are believed to be born from the ashes of Titans, a harsh savage race, but posses within them the divine spark due to cannibalism.
Zeus then disguises himself as a mortal and sleeps with Semele, daughter of King Cadmus and Harmonia. Hera tries to trick her into revealing Zeus's "godhood", who complies and fries her to a crisp as he unleashes thunderbolts. Her unborn child, Dionysus, is rescued by Hermes, brought to Zeus, sewn into his thigh for gestation, and is born a second time, whereby he is raised by the Nymphs of Nyssa in the Far East.

II. Maturity - After inventing viticulture in Nyssa in the East, Dionysus is driven mad by Hera, and wanders throughout the Egypt, Syria, and Phrygia in search of a cure. He is cured by Cibele, and during his stay in Phrygia he picks up cross-dressing (associated with Eastern cultures) as well as his own entourage. Newly supported, he begins to push socially established boundaries.

Primarily characterized by orgiastic worship and Thiasus, a wild group of followers (Ekstasis, "standing outside oneself"; Enthousiasmos, "having the god within" = god in, reason out, loss of identity.)
     Thiasus:
     - Satyrs: Half man, half goat/horse ("Faun" in latin)
     - Sileni: drunken followers
     - Maenads: "mad women", clad in leopard skins and snake headbands, wielding thyrsus.
     - Bacchae/Bacchantes: the original groupies (human)
     Rituals:
     - Satyrs chasing Maenads (promotion of sexual licentiousness and violence)
     - Sparagamos, "tearing" apart of live flesh
     - Omophagy, "eating raw flesh" while still alive
     - Animal sacrifice (ie. rabbits, squirrels, dogs, etc)


IV. Midas and the Golden Touch - King Midas of Phrygia captures Silenus, the lead Sileni of the Thiasus famed for his tall tales. For his return, Dionysus grants Midas one wish. King Midas's golden touch becomes a gift and a curse, as he can no longer eat, drink, or touch those he loves, so he washes it out in the Pactolus River, which now flows with gold.

V. Resistance to Dionysus:
1. Dionysus and his Thiasus are prevented passage through Thrace by Lycurgus (King of Thrace), so Zeus drives the king blind/mad.
2. Proetids, daughter of Proetus (King of Argos) refuse the new religion of Dionysus along with the women of Argos. Dionysus plagues them with a nasty itch that can only be soothed by wild behavior, shouting, and dancing.
3. Dionysus is abducted and bound by sailors, who think he is a mere mortal. When the bonds miraculously fall off, they still refuse to acknowledge his divinity, so the ship starts to flow with wine and creep with ivy. Dionysus transforms into a lion and the crew jumps into the sea, becoming dolphins.
4. Upon Dionysus' return to Thebes, his divinity is rejected by Pentheus, King of Thebes, his own cousin, despite the warnings of Cadmus (former king) and seer Tiresias. As a result, the women of Thebes are driven to insanity, and wander about Mt. Citharon behaving badly. Pentheus has a mysterious stranger arrested, who thwarts his imprisonment and drives Pentheus insane with double vision, loss of identity, and the curiosity to spy on the maddened women of Thebes. Naturally, he is caught and torn to pieces, head mounted on a stake and paraded through Thebes by his own mother. Thebes regains their senses and realize the legitimate power of Dionysus, affirming him as their deity.