talkstowolves: I speak with wolves and other wicked creatures. (america)
Deborah ([personal profile] talkstowolves) wrote2005-04-20 10:44 am
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Early Theorizing - American Mythology

Some of my first formalized thoughts on American Mythology, taken verbatim from an e-mail to a friend:

America has no mythology... like other cultures have mythology.

That's right. We don't have the ethnic background for it.

Okay, okay, so the Native Americans have a mythology, yes. But that's not American. That's Native American.

You see, America is made up of people who abandoned their own cultures (for the most part) and came to a
new land to make a fresh start. They brought their beliefs with them, but those beliefs had to be adapted
to (and ended up being molded by) the new land in which the people found themselves. (I am especially
interested in examining that critical change point by researching new immigrants to the USA and how their
personal mythos is warped in the first-generation Americans born to immigrant parents.) Because people
were eventually stripped of their ethnic identity and thrown into the so-called melting-pot of America,
their mythologies faded away.

Of course, a contemporary mythology has slowly evolved in America, but it's actually a relatively unhealthy mythology. The mythology of America involves it being:


the land of plenty (but often the land of waste considering the huge portions, etc.);

unparallelled beauty (Americans idolize unhealthy concepts of beauty represented by supermodels that
aren't even real. And this high bar of beauty can be met by, well, pretty much no American.);

the land of the young (Americans are pathetically scared of aging and death-- hence the obsession with
plastic surgery);

the land of purity/deviance (America has a real split personality when it comes to sexual topics. There is a serious lack of sexual education and it's almost considered taboo in some ways-- that's the Christian
Fundamentalism. On the other hand, there's the pornography industry that promotes a pretty unhealthy
view of sexuality.)

Those are some of the bigger topics in contemporary American mythology. I know they're mostly negative,
but America hasn't represented its virtues for many, many years now (if it ever really did represent its
supposed virtues). Instead of fighting for freedom for everyone, we're now involved in a war in Iraq that's more about control. Instead of being the "land of the brave," more than half of the youth of America would never wish to serve in its military. Instead of being the "land of opportunity," hardly anyone can find a suitable job in spite of the appropriate college degree.

Sometimes I feel like America is a lost country, and I'm not sure how we'll reclaim that fundamental
American spirit.

[identity profile] agravaine.livejournal.com 2005-04-28 06:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Well I have never studies mythology, though I do love it, so I maybe way out of place here.

America has a mythology, other than our folklore urban legends and legends, I consider something of a myhtology laid out in some of the writings of Faulkner. umm specifically the section of "The Bear" in Go Down Moses, but also his treatment of the hearth in the later sections and Pantaloon in Black.

I don't think America is so much a lost country, (but then again I also think that stopping genocide and dictators is not reprehesible. I am only sorry, very sorry, it took Sept. 11 to make some people open their eys to some of what has been going on in other places.)

I suppose the image of the cowboy or gunfighter soed not qualify as a mythological hero in some way. I don't know. I have Joseph Campbells book about heroes but I have yet to read it, to busy with required readiong for classes.

Like I said, I am probably way out of place, but here is my opinion anyway.
Thank you for considering it.

Also, as a seconf genderation American from my parents I hear all the time that this is the land of plenty, or the land of oppurtunity. My grandparents came here with nothing and their children led a better life here than they could have at home. Now my sister and I are going to college, we are the first in our immediate familyy to be doing so. And one one side of the family completely the first at all, the other side had more rapid success so some of my aunts and uncles went to college, but I think only one finished with a BA. ANyway I am still friends with a great deal of immigrants or first generation Americans and they believe there is much oppurtunity here, more than they could have had at their native countries. We all keep our own traditions but incoprorate them into the new, so when we celebrte Thanksgiving we have turkey but also rice and beans and lasagna. From the Italian side of my family we have many of the superstitions alive and well that my grnadparents came over with. On my Irish side my Grnadmother tried to discourage retaing the "Old country" so my sister and I are trying to retrieve it.

I know this has not been helpful for a mythology study, sorry.
Agravaine