Tuesday, July 9

Day 25

I have my second Tutorial today. I am also going to be mailing out  postcards and doing laundry. Definitely will be doing laundry...

Here is my Second Tutorial Essay:


What is ‘myth’ according to C.S. Lewis, and how useful is it as a category for reading literature?


Prepared for Dr. Jonathan Kirkpatrick

with the SCIO Oxford Summer Programme

by Veronica Schneider

Introduction:

C.S. Lewis has a rather unique connection with myth. When he was a young child he found great enjoyment in reading mythology form the northern areas of Europe. He fondly called it the “Northerness”. He would use these myths as an escape from the everyday and they helped him stumble upon the all illusive joy.

Later in life though, the concept of myth led him to greater things. It was myth, Lewis claims in Surprised by Joy, which led him to find Christianity again. “If ever a myth had become fact, had been incarnated, it would be just like this (Christianity).” (pg. 274)

Lewis revered myth not for what it could promise him but because it was so awe inspiring in itself. This later helped him revere God in a similar way. Lewis states in Surprised by Joy “God was to be obeyed simply because he was God. Long since, through the gods of Asgard, and later through the notion of the Absolute, He had taught me how a thing can be revered not for what it can do for us but for what it is in itself.” (pg. 269) He did not limit myth to just that of the bible though. According to William Gray, Lewis thought that “Other myths could have some measure of 'truth' insofar as they referred unconsciously to the 'true' myth of Christ. This is the old Christian idea of the Greek poets being—like the Hebrew prophets—a preparatio evangelica”

Myth According to Lewis

“The stories I am thinking of always have a very simple narrative shape – a satisfactory and inevitable shape” C.S. Lewis[1]

One may think of the gods of the North with their rough and tough appearances or the Greek and Roman gods who seemed to play human chess with us on earth, when the word myth is mentioned. The Greek definition for myth is a collection of stories. In my Intro to Folklore and Mythology class the professor termed myth as being derived from mythos meaning truth. C.S. Lewis describes myth a little differently. He took more care in the explanation of myth so that it may be used as a categorization aid. 

When Lewis is clarifying his description for myth he begins by talking about a story. He describes this type of story as “a particular kind of story (which) has a value in itself – a value independent of its embodiments in any literary work.”(pg. 41) This story does not need a particular author to tell it or artist to shape it. It is its own independent form and the artists seem to be able to capture it in various forms.

In trying to describe these exquisite stories Lewis did not think that the word myth as it had been defined earlier was quite the word that he was looking for because it is such a general term. He thought using the term myth though was better than coining his own term. So he set himself to the task of defining myth.

There are six parts to Lewis’ definition of myth:

1. Myths are extra literary not due to the Highest Common Factor (H.C.F). They have a mythical experience in common.

C.S. Lewis thinks that under all mythical texts and stories there is a “great myth” that is underlying. It seems to be an idea similar to Carl Jung’s theory of a generalized archetype. The great myth is there and everyone has some bits and pieces but not enough historical fact to make their myth the true myth. Hinduism was, according to Lewis, close to achieving the true myth status in his eyes but was not quite as developed as Christianity in the end.
 

2. When you first hear a myth it gives you a permanent object of contemplation which works upon you like a peculiar flavor or quality.

Lewis elaborates “The pleasure of myths depends hardly at all on such unusual narrative attractions [such] as suspense or surprise.”(pg. 43) This is interesting because in Surprised by Joy (which was published 6 years earlier) Lewis talks about his experience in literary criticism and the effects of the gospel as myths. “I was now too experienced in literary criticism to regard the gospels as myths...They had not the mythical taste.”(pg. 274) Taste seems to have been a factor that Lewis had been contemplating for some while.

3. “Human sympathy is at a minimum” projection into characters is not strong. “We feel indeed that the pattern of their movements has a profound relevance to our own life, but we do not imaginatively transport ourselves into theirs.” (pg. 44)

In Lewis’ Till we have faces: a myth retold he seems to disregard this clarifying point. He creates strong characters in the text that you could transport yourself into rather than seeing a pattern. Taken from a quote in our handout Lewis explains in a letter to Mrs. D Jessup why he may have done this. Lewis writes “If there is more pity and depth in my last book [Till we have faces] than its predecessors, perhaps my own recent life has something to do with it.” This letter was written in 1957 which was around the time that he married Joy Davidman. His recent marriage may have been what he was alluding to in his letter.

4. Myth is fantastic; it deals with impossibles and preternaturals.

It is interesting that Lewis choose to include the term preternatural in his definition of myth. Preternatural as we discussed in class is the observation that there is a phenomenon that is outside of the natural realm but does not involve the supernatural powers of a deity. Yet in his sixth point of the myth definition he points out that it is numinous which means that the myth must be supernatural. What is the significance of Lewis’ inclusion of the preternatural in this definition? If the supernatural is involved then would not one assume that fantastic things will happen? It appears that he wants no assumptions that one characteristic would be covered by another.   Lewis has a clear idea on what myth entails and he wants no mistake about that.

5. The myth is always grave.

Lewis does not mean that it cannot include joy within the text but there is no myth in his mind that can be considered ‘comic’ myth. It seems to fall in line with the thought that myth is spiritual and deeply awe inspiring for Lewis. He made a point of it in his definition of myth. Gray brings up the possibility that myth “represents a pathetic attempt by the middle-aged Lewis to console himself with fantasy for the blighting of his emotional life by the death of his mother” (pg. 163) in which case he would not want myth to be taken lightly.

6. It also inspiring and numinous.

In order for a myth to be numinous it requires the presence of the supernatural or divinity. Lewis does not a term that would restrict it to require the myth to have God in it because that would defeat the purpose that myth can represent the true myth, Christianity. He leaves it up to the author to portray the numinous side of myth.

Myth as a Literary Category

Lewis’ intentions were not concerned with how myths came about. He was “concerned with the effects of myths as the act on the conscious imagination...” “... It alone exists as an object of contemplation.” “It is one more effort to seize, to conceptualise, the important something which myth seems to suggest” (pg. 45)

Lewis does however want to clarify that he is trying to provide a definition for categorizing myths, he is basing it on the effects that it has on individuals, and because of that he wants to further explain the two types of readers (literary and unliterary) and how this definition for categorization will be appreciated by one but not the other.

The literary man will be able to distinguish that myth cannot be held to the same standard as other literary works because myth is not dependent upon the literary form like other types of stories are. There are so many other forms in which the myth is expressed that the literary man will be able to see the myth in not only poorly written pieces but also great works of literature and art. If the words or author fail the true fantastic, numinous nature of the myth it does not matter because the literary man will be able to spot it anyway.

 The Unliterary man cannot appreciate this though. Lewis claims that the unliterary man relies far too heavily on the author and the literary form to carry them through the story. My colleague Katie Ootsman and I were discussing a point which I had not thought about when reading the term unliterary. We found the term “unliterary” can have a negative connotation if the individual thinks that it is the same as “illiterate” which means that the person has no form of education. This does not appear to be the case that Lewis was trying to make. As Katie put it, it is like an archaeologist and a national geographic photographer. The former is digging into the story to find the myth underneath while the latter is looking for the prettiest picture they can make in their mind.

Michael Ward in Planet Narnia talks about something that Lewis mentions in An Experiment in Criticism, contemplation. Ward elaborates on the difference between the two terms “Enjoyment, for Lewis, was to be distinguished from Contemplation...” (pg. 16) Ward goes on to explain that C.S. Lewis wrote an essay on the differences between the two titled ‘Meditation in a toolshed’. Lewis writes about looking at a sunbeam in a dark toolshed. He makes the following observation “Looking along the beam and looking at the beam are very different experiences.” (pg. 17) He was heavily influenced by Samuel Alexander in this regards.

If you try to contemplate rather than enjoy a myth Ward says you can find the “quality going dead and cold” (pg. 18) He goes on to say that “In the Alexander sense: the atmosphere should be entered into so that it comprises our whole imaginative vision.”(pg. 18) This goes back to our discussion in the literary and unliterary man. One man, the unliterary, is looking at the beam and can only contemplate what he sees right there in front of him. The other man, the literary, looks along the sunbeam to see the wonderful world that has been opened up for him by enjoying the myth and finding the true myth in the literary work.

Conclusion

“...the degree to which any story is a myth depends very largely on the person who hears it or reads it.” (pg. 48) How useful then is it to have Lewis’ definition of myth be the categorizer for literary works? Unless you can have a standard categorization that is fairly universal then you will continue to have debates on which works are or are not myths.

One of Lewis’ requirements for myths is the second one in which the myth gives you a peculiar taste or flavor. Ward points out that Lewis describes romanticism in a similar way and how he states “...It is notoriously difficult to put these tastes into words” (pg. 16) shows that while trying to describe a myth you cannot always quantitatively nor qualitatively accomplish it. It is based on the effects and emotions each individual feels. Is this truly a good way to categorize literature? Leaving it up to the literary reader to feel whether or not this specific text tastes like a myth?

It does not appear to a definition that can be used universally. Although it does provide more clarification on the subject of myth, it cannot be used to categorize myths because it is too individualized. One person or even group will feel that this work has myth in it and another individual or group might think differently. What would the usefulness be to others to measure myth if the definition on categorization changes depending on the person? While C.S. Lewis provides wonderful insight on the subject of myth, his definition is too indescribable to be able to categorize myths.

Word Count: 2045

The above essay is all my own work: the source of all material used in its compilation has been duly cited, and all help received is acknowledged. The essay does not substantially duplicate material previously or simultaneously submitted to academic staff at any academic institution.

Signature_______________________________________       Date_____________________
Works Cited

Gray, William. "Death, Myth and Reality in C.S. Lewis." Journal of Beliefs & Values:

Studies in 18.2 (1997): 147-154. Taylor and Francis Online. Web. 27 June 2013. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1361767970180202>.

Lewis, C. S. An Experiment in Criticism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,1992.Print.

Lewis, C. S. Surprised by Joy. Great Britain: Geoffrey Bles, 1955. Print.

Lewis, C. S. Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold. London: Fount , 1998. Print.

Ward, Michael. Planet Narnia. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2008. Print.




[1] An Experiment in Criticism by C.S. Lewis pg. 42

No comments:

Post a Comment