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Autolycus and Sisyphus – Some Words about the Category of Trickster in Ancient Mythology

Data publikacji: 28.12.2020

Studia Religiologica, 2020, Tom 53, Numer 3, s. 203 - 212

https://doi.org/10.4467/20844077SR.20.014.12754

Autorzy

Konrad Dominas
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5120-4159 Orcid
Wszystkie publikacje autora →

Tytuły

Autolycus and Sisyphus – Some Words about the Category of Trickster in Ancient Mythology

Abstrakt

The goal of this article is to juxtapose the trickster model suggested by William J. Hynes in the text Mapping the Characteristics of Mythic Tricksters: A Heuristic Guide with the stories of Sisyphus and Autolycus. A philological method proposed in this article is based on a way of understanding a myth narrowly, as a narrative with a specific meaning, which can be expressed in any literary genre. According to this definition, every mythology which is available today is an attempt at presenting a story of particular mythical events and the fortunes of gods and heroes. Therefore, stories about Sisyphus and Autolycus are myths that have been transformed and which in their essence may have multiple meanings and cannot be attributed to one artist. The philological method is, in this way, based on isolating all fragments of the myth relating to the above protagonists and subsequently presenting them as a coherent narrative.

Bibliografia

Primary Sources

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Apollodorus, The Library, trans. J.G. Frazer, Loeb Classical Library, vol. 121 & 122, Cambridge, MA–London 1921.

Cicero M. Tullius, De natura deorum, O. Plasberg, Leipzig 1917.

Homer, The Odyssey, trans. A.T. Murray, Cambridge, MA–London 1919, vol. 1–2.

The Myths of Hyginus, trans. and ed. M. Grant, “University of Kansas Publications in Humanistic Studies,” no. 34, Lawrence 1960.

Secondary sources

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Doty W.G., A Lifetime of Trouble-Making: Hermes as Trickster, [in:] Mythical Trickster Figures: Contours, Contexts, and Criticisms, W.G. Doty, W.J. Hynes (eds.), Tuscaloosa–London 1993, pp. 46–65.

Doty W.G., Hynes W.J., Historical Overview of Theoretical Issues: The Problem of the Trickster, [in:] Mythical Trickster Figures: Contours, Contexts, and Criticisms, W.G. Doty, W.J. Hynes (eds.), Tuscaloosa–London 1993, pp. 13–32.

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Informacje

Informacje: Studia Religiologica, 2020, Tom 53, Numer 3, s. 203 - 212

Typ artykułu: Oryginalny artykuł naukowy

Tytuły:

Polski:

Autolycus and Sisyphus – Some Words about the Category of Trickster in Ancient Mythology

Angielski:

Autolycus and Sisyphus – Some Words about the Category of Trickster in Ancient Mythology

Autorzy

https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5120-4159

Konrad Dominas
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5120-4159 Orcid
Wszystkie publikacje autora →

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

Publikacja: 28.12.2020

Status artykułu: Otwarte __T_UNLOCK

Licencja: CC BY-NC-ND  ikona licencji

Udział procentowy autorów:

Konrad Dominas (Autor) - 100%

Korekty artykułu:

-

Języki publikacji:

Angielski