T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1635.1 | Roughly equivalent to Kali. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Mar 09 1992 15:22 | 15 |
| A fairly ill-omened name, Ro. The myth that is most usually told --
called classically "The Rape of Persephone" -- makes of Persephone a
rather sad victim. Kidnapped by Hades (aka Pluto) to be his Queen of
the Dead. Her mother, Cerce, attempts to rescue her. In one rather
late (classical period) version of the story she partially succeeds and
Persephone is allowed to spend half the year on Earth instead of below
it (your basic springtime myth). This shows that Disney didn't invent
sticking a happy ending on a tragic tale. The happy ending version is
the version usually told today. The "real" version, however, has Cerce
failing completely and Persephone becomes fully the co-ruler of the
dark realm -- second in fearsomeness only to her husband (who was so
terrifying that people generally avoided using his name and substituted
replacements like Pluto -- The Rich One).
Topher
|
1635.2 | | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Mon Mar 09 1992 15:38 | 13 |
| Thanks Topher for the info. I ended up doing a search in here for all
the references to Persephone (some in Tarot, some in Jung topics).
Since I've been doing some work with Jungian approach to dreaming and
archetypes, I think I'll view her as my own 'shadow' side emerging.
Not as an 'evil' figure, but as suppressed aspects of my spirit which
aren't necessarily to be viewed as 'dark' just areas that have been in
denial.
Thanks again,
Ro with the firey fast little car! ;')
|
1635.3 | Persephone's cameos in other myths | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | Harvey/Dowd in '92 | Mon Mar 09 1992 15:43 | 25 |
| Name nits: Persephone's mother was Ceres in Latin (as in "cereal"; she
was a grain goddess), not Cerce; her Greek name was Demeter.
Persephone's Latin name was Proserpina.
I know a couple of minor myths involving Persphone. Aphrodite had a
mortal or demi-mortal lover named Adonis, who died in a hunting
accident. In one version of the story, he died because Persephone
wanted him down in the underworld, as her own lover. As I recall,
Aphrodite complained to her nephew Zeus, who adjudicated custody --
Adonis spent half his time in the underworld with Persephone and the
other half with Aphrodite, thus making Adonis himself a seasonal deity,
like Persephone in the happy-ending version of her own main myth.
In the myth of Eros and Psyche, Aphrodite plays a cross between a bad
fairy and a termagent mother-in-law and sends her hapless daughter-in-
law Psyche a series of impossible-seeming tasks. One, the last, I
think, is to descend to the underworld and beg a boxful of beauty from
Persephone for Aphrodite. (Coals to Newcastle, one would think.)
I think, though I am far from sure, that the Alexandrians identified
her with Isis as Queen of the Dead.
You might want to consider naming your car "Susie" or something.
Earl Wajeberg
|
1635.4 | Nice image | DWOVAX::STARK | Use your imagination | Mon Mar 09 1992 15:44 | 8 |
| re: (A car named) Persephone,
Sort of a classical 'Christine,' eh ?
I like it, Ro, I can just see you blazing across the sky in your
flaming chariot. :-)
todd
|
1635.5 | Same Kali? | TNPUBS::PAINTER | let there be music | Mon Mar 09 1992 16:28 | 11 |
|
Re.1
Topher,
Your reference to Kali - is that the goddess in India lore?
If so, I have an explanation of Kali's symbolism online somewhere
that's interesting and would be happy to enter it in here.
Cindy
|
1635.6 | | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Mar 09 1992 17:02 | 12 |
| RE: .3 (Earl)
> Name nits: Persephone's mother was Ceres in Latin (as in "cereal"; she
> was a grain goddess), not Cerce; her Greek name was Demeter.
> Persephone's Latin name was Proserpina.
Whoops! <red face> Absolutely right Earl. I knew that didn't look
right and I kept thinking I was spelling it wrong. Cerce was, of
course, the evil sorceress who appeared in various Greek myths and
hero tales (including the Odyssey).
Topher
|
1635.7 | Death is not evil, and Persephone is Death. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Mar 09 1992 17:11 | 13 |
| RE: .2 (Ro)
> Not as an 'evil' figure, but as suppressed aspects of my spirit which
> aren't necessarily to be viewed as 'dark' just areas that have been in
> denial.
Persephone fits that perfectly. She is certainly not to be considered
evil -- mysterious and dangerous, but just. This is my association
with "dark". I did not mean to imply that Persephone was evil. In
darkness evil can flourish but not everything, or even most things, in
the realm of darkness should be considered evil.
Topher
|
1635.8 | Who named who? | TERZA::ZANE | Imagine... | Mon Mar 09 1992 17:14 | 15 |
|
I was under the impression that the car named itself, so it's not a case
of the basenoter (sorry, I forgot your name) naming the car as much as
the car "presenting" its name.
My present car "named" itself "Melanie." She was rather insistent about
it. The salesman told me her color was "sand." This is a rather
ambiguous color description, as sand comes in many colors. It doesn't
look sandy to me. Anyway, she rather indignantly told me that she was
melon colored and that her name was Melanie. "Fine," I said, very
surprised by her intensity. "Okay by me."
Terza
|
1635.9 | Same Kali. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Mar 09 1992 17:54 | 20 |
| RE: .5 (Cindy)
Yes, I was refering to the Hindu goddess. The analogy is only very
rough, though -- I was trying to communicate Persephone's dire nature.
One analogy which seems appropos is that Kali (in variously named
aspects) is very clearly the female side of a dual male/female
deity -- Shiva. This is somewhat the feel of Persephone/Hades --
unlike the other two rulers of the Universe in Greek mythology (no one
would think of Hecate as a female aspect to Zeus -- she was very much
a different "person").
A major difference, though is that Kali is the goddess of destruction
of all kinds, and is generally pictured as bloodthirsty. Persephone
is a goddess only of death, not of violence or destruction in general,
and she did not revel in cruelty or death (nor shrink from it).
What you have on Kali might be interesting for comparison -- but Kali
and Persephone were/are distinctly different myths.
Topher
|
1635.10 | More on Kali | TNPUBS::PAINTER | let there be music | Mon Mar 09 1992 18:24 | 78 |
|
From: "The Essense Of Self-Realization - the Wisdom of Yogananda, by
J.Donald Walter, p.147-148
"One thing I cannot appreciate in the Hindu religion," said a Christian
severely, "is its plethora of gods."
"There are many," agreed Yogananda. "Each, however, represents an
attempt to remind us of God in one of His innumerable aspects. They are
abstractions - a way of saying, 'No human being can really understand
what God *is*, but here, at least, is something that He *does*.'"
"Take, for example, the image of the goddess Kali. This s a good case
in point, because, out of all Hindu images, Kali has been the most
misunderstood by Western minds."
"Kali stands naked. Her right foot is placed on the chest of Her
prostrate husband. Her hair streams out, disheveled, behind Her. A
garland of human heads adorns Her neck. In one of four hands She
brandishes a sword; in another, a severed head. Her tongue, usually
painted a bright red, lolls out as though in blood-lust."
At this point the Christian shuddered. Yogananda grinned roguishly.
"If we thought that this image depicted Kali as She is," he continued,
"I grant you, it might awaken devotion in very few devotees! However,
the purpose of that image is to describe certain universal functions of
the Divine in Nature."
"Kali represents Mother Nature. She is Aum, the cosmic vibration. In
Aum everything exists - all matter, all energy, and the thoughts of all
conscious beings. Hence, Her garland of heads, to show that She is
invisibly present in all minds.
"The play of life and death expresses Her activity in Nature: creation,
preservation, and destruction. Hence the sword, the head, and a third
hand extended, bestowing life.
"Her energy is onmipresent; hence Her streaming hair, representing
energy.
"Shiva, Her husband, represents God in His vibrationless state, beyond
creation. Thus, He is depicted as supine.
"Kali's tongue is protruding not in blood-lust as most people believe,
but because in India, when a person makes a mistake, he sticks out his
tongue. In the West, don't you express embarrassment somewhat
similarly? You put your hands to your mouth.
"Kali is depicted as dancing all over creation. This dance represents
the movement of cosmic vibration, in which all things exist. When
Kali's foot touches the breast of the Infinite, however, She puts her
tongue out as if to say, 'Oh, oh, I've gone to far!' For at the touch
of the Infinite Spirit, all vibration ceases.
"Kali's fourth hand is raised in blessing on those who seek, not Her
gifts, but liberation from this endless play of 'maya' or delusion.
"Those who feel themselves attracted to Nature's outward manifestations
must continue the endless round of life and death, through incarnation
after incarnation. Those devotees, however, who deeply long for freedom
from the cosmic play worship God as the indwelling Self. Through
meditation, they merge in the infinite Aum. And from oneness with Aum
they pass beyond creation, to unite their consciousness with God,
timeless, and Eternal Bliss.
"The statues of Kali are not intended to depict the Divine Mother as She
looks, but simply to display Her functions in the aspect of Mother
Nature.
"The Divine Mother, is, of course, without form, though we may say also
that Her body is the entire universe, with its infinity of suns and
moons. She can also appear to the devotee in human form, however. When
She does, She is enshrined in supernal beauty.
"All the images of gods in India are symbolic. We must look beyond
their shapes to the hidden meanings they represent."
|
1635.11 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Ok...but only once | Tue Mar 10 1992 08:35 | 10 |
| RE: Basenote,
The myth of Persephone has a lot to say to Many
women...IMHO. Her rape and decending into hell gives a graphic
description of our society's thoughts on women. And yet her
coming back out after her mother made a deal with Pluto gives rise to
hope. She became the Sun.
Dave
|
1635.12 | Persephone rising | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Tue Mar 10 1992 08:58 | 9 |
| Yes, Dave, I agree, an archetype for the collective consciousness of
American (or maybe all) women today perhaps.
Re: Terza. Yup, I feel the car named itself because the idea of naming
the car and the name itself, Persephone, popped into my head and I had
no knowledge of who/what Persephone was.
Ro
|
1635.13 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | shaman, re-member yourself. | Tue Mar 10 1992 10:00 | 11 |
| The perspective that speaks most clearly to me on the Persephone story
is that of our need to explore our own inner Underworld, or to put it
another way, to engage the shadow parts of ourselves. Most of the time
we do not do this willingly, so a figure from the Underworld "kidnaps"
us, forcing us to make this journey into the darkened parts of ourselves.
I believe the rape of Persephone in this sense symbolically relates to
the need for unity between the Shadow and the ego, and if we don't
willingly "make love" with our Shadow it will force itself upon us.
Karen
|
1635.14 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Visualize whirled peas! | Tue Mar 10 1992 10:16 | 109 |
|
OK, I dug out my Mythic Tarot deck and book. It is based on the Greek
Myths and here is what it has to say on Persephone:
Persephone is the High Priestess card.
the card of the High Priestess portrays a slender, etherial woman with
pale skin, with long black hair and dark eyes, dressed in a simple
white gown. on her head is a golden crown. In her right hand she holds
a pomegranate, split open to show it's multitude of seeds. In her left
hand a bunch of white Narcissi trail to the ground. On either side of
the stairway on which she stands, is a pillar; the left one is black,
the white one white. Behind her, at the top of the staircase, a doorway
opens onto a rich green landscape which appears in thhe card of the
Empress.
The pomegranate is both the fruit of the dead and of conjugal love
because of it's many seeds. thus Persephone's hiden world is fertile
and full of undeveloped creative potential.
The black and white pillars reflect the duality contained in the
underworld. Both creative potentials and destructive impulses are
contained in the darkness of the unconcious.
The Narcissus, which Persephone picked when Hades abducted her, ws
associated with the dead because of it's ghastly color and it's annual
emergence from the winter earth.
Here we meet Persephone, queen of the underworld, daughter of the Earth
Mother, Demeter and guardian of the secrets of the dead. We have
already seen, in the card of the Empress, how, according to myth,
Hades, lord of the underworld, was overwhelmed with desire for the
maiden while she wandered in the fields picking flowers, and rose up
out of the earth to abduct her. When he had brought her to his dark
abode, he offered her a pomegranate, which she ate. Having partaken of
the fruit of the dead, she was bound to him forever.
Persephone ruled over the underworld with her husband for three monnths
of the year. Although the remaining nine months were spent in the
daylight world with her mother, Demeter, she could never speak of the
secrets she had learned in the land of the dead. The realm of Hades,
full of mysteries and riches, was ringed around by the terrible river
Styx, over which no man or woman could cross without the permission of
Hades himself; although Hermes, messenger of the gods and guide of
souls, could usher through those exceptionl heroes who had gained the
god's consent. Even the souls of the dead could not cross without
paying a coin to Charon, the old ferryman who rowed the boat of passage
across the Styx, for at the gateway to Hade's realm crouched the
terrifying three-headed dog Cerberus who devoured any trespasser,
living or dead, who did not respect the laws of the invisible realm.
Thus, through eating the pomegranate, Persephone left behing her
innocent girlhood, and became guardian of this shadowy realm and
custodian of it's secrets.
On and inner level, Persephone, The High Priestess, is an image of that
link with the mysterious inner world to which depth psychology has
given the name, "the unconcious". It is as though, beneath and beyond
the ordinary daylight world which we believe to be reality, lies
another, hidden world, full or riches and potentials, which we cannot
penetrate without the consent of it's invisible rulers. This world
contains our undeveloped potentials as well as the darker, more
primitive facets of the personality. It also holds the secret of the
destiny of the individual, which gestates in the darkness until the
time is ripe for manifestation. Persephone, the High Priestess, is and
embodiment of that part of us which knows the secrets of the inner
world. But she can only be dimly sensed by waking conciousness, and
appears through fleeting fragments of dreams, or through those strange
coincidences which make us begin to wonder whether there might be some
hidden pattern at work in our lives.
Persephone is a seductive and fascinating figure, but she does not
speak of her secrets. In the same way the night-world of the
unconcious, glimpsed through dreams and fantasies and intuitions, is
also seductive and fascinating, but when we try to grasp it and
"master" it for our own purposes, it remains mute and slides away. The
dark world of Persephone provides only shadowy glimpses of patterns and
movements at work within the invidual, which require patience and the
passage of time before they can be brought into the light of day. The
myth of Persephone emphasizes the cyclical motion of time, portrayiong
a mysterious rythym, a constant coming and going of something. The
seeds of change and new potentials wait silently in the womb of the
underworld before they are given over to the care of the Earth Mother
and brought to birth in the material world. Persephone, the High
Priestess, is an image of that natural law at work within the depths of
the soul which governs the unfoldment of destiny from an invisible
source, and which is revealed only through fleeing intuition and the
night-world of dreams.
On a divinatory level, the appearance of the High Priestess in a spread
augurs the heightening of the powers of intuition, and implies that
there willo be an encounter of some kind with the inner world which
Persephone rules. the individual may be drawn inexplicably to this
world through an interest in the occult or the esoteric, or through the
effects of a powerful dream, or the uuncanny sense that "something" is
at work one's life. Thus the Fool, having learned something of his
physical nature and needs and his place in the world through his
earthly parents, the Empress and the Emperor, now enters the
night-world and comes, often with confusion and bewilderment, to that
silent figure who embodies Mother on another deeper and subtler level -
the womb of the unconcious in which the secret of his real purpose and
the pattern of his destiny are contained.
Well, that's what the book said. Maybe Roey just has a hot, red car.
:-)
PJ
|
1635.15 | merging and emerging | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Wings of fire: Percie and me | Tue Mar 10 1992 10:25 | 8 |
| Thanks Karen, that is what I was trying to imply - you just did it more
eloquently (as always). ;')
And thanks PJ for typing all that in. I appreciate your taking the
time to do that on your busy schedule.
Ro (and Persephone thanks you too!)
|
1635.16 | Another red, not Persephone's pomegranate | ELWOOD::BATES | Good is a noun | Tue Mar 10 1992 10:32 | 15 |
|
re .8 - a brief digression from Persephone and the underworld -
Terza: As I began to read, I thought - hmmm, another dark-named vehicle,
since the name Melanie actually means "the dark-complexioned one" in
Greek. Surprised to find that your car is actually melony in colour,
but I too, feel that we can sometimes hear vehicles 'call out' their
names to us.
My Volkswagen is Tiziano, after the Venetian artist, since its red is
that burnished russet that one often finds in his work. The name came
before I found the page in the owner's manual that lists my car's colour
as Titian Red, so obviously someone else heard the call of the hue...
Gloria
|
1635.17 | Old Blue | DWOVAX::STARK | Use your imagination | Tue Mar 10 1992 10:36 | 3 |
| My dependable '66 Chevy Belaire was "Old Blue." I guess my mythic
consciousness isn't very well developed. :-)
todd
|
1635.18 | Ol' Silver Bullet or Banana boat or Black orchid or... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Tue Mar 10 1992 11:14 | 11 |
| re: .16 (Glowormia)
Titian red, eh? Hmmmm...the mind boggles...
I never name my cars...I seem to let others do it for me.
One of my cars (that at least two of those in here have seen ;-) )
was "affectionately" called "Road Warrior"---you have to see it
to understand. At least it's better than "Road Kill."
Frederick
|
1635.19 | Yesterday was not my day. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Mar 10 1992 14:04 | 16 |
| RE: .9 (Me)
> unlike the other two rulers of the Universe in Greek mythology (no one
> would think of Hecate as a female aspect to Zeus -- she was very much
> a different "person").
I did it again. I meant, of course, Hera, who was Zeus' wife, rather
than Hecate. Perhaps my subconscious is trying to tell me something,
though damn if I know what. Hecate was the goddess of sorcery and
magic. Cerce was probably a preistess of Hecate (given her multiple
appearences in Greek mythology, she may not have been intended as
a particular person but as an office such as chief priestess of
Hecate). Hecate aided in the search for Persephone and is the one
who discovered her in the underworld.
Topher
|
1635.20 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | shaman, re-member yourself. | Tue Mar 10 1992 14:59 | 9 |
| .19,
> I did it again.
Geesh Topher, would u get yer myths together, fer Mt. Olympus' sake?!
:-)
Karen
|
1635.21 | | RUBY::PAY$FRETTS | Will,not Spirit,is magnetic | Tue Mar 10 1992 15:09 | 6 |
|
The color of my car is Misty Dawn....I call her Misty. Brings up
images of "The Mists of Avalon" whenever I think of it.
Carole
|
1635.22 | Play Misty for me ;') | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Wings of fire: Percie and me | Tue Mar 10 1992 15:27 | 7 |
| Neat Carole - although we're still reading Mists of Avalon (as you know
*someone* is reading it to me ;') ) so I'm not sure if it quite fits,
but PJ's description of Persephone from the Tarot cards reminded me of
Morgaine.
Ro
|
1635.23 | | SCARGO::CONNELL | Visualize whirled peas! | Tue Mar 10 1992 16:09 | 9 |
| ro, that's interesting, because the High Priestess card in the Merlin
Tarot refers to Morgaine. I'll have to dig that one up. As youu know
that deck is very special for me. :-)
Hmm, I'd better get the Tarot of the Old path card also. The High
Priestess is the card on the box cover and the book. the I run out of
Tarot decks that I own.
PJ
|
1635.24 | | TERZA::ZANE | Imagine... | Wed Mar 11 1992 10:29 | 13 |
| Hi Gloria,
I didn't know the meaning of Melanie, although it makes sense. I'll have
to think about it...
Tiziano, that's neat!
Terza
P.S.-What's the difference between anthropomorphizing an object and
projecting unknown parts of ourselves onto it? Does it matter?
|
1635.25 | | ELWOOD::BATES | Good is a noun | Wed Mar 11 1992 17:52 | 9 |
|
Terza:
Since I'm not sure what you mean when you say "projecting unknown parts
of ourselves onto an object" I can't compare that to anthropomorphosis,
which I'm familiar with on literary and anthropological terms. But I'm
interested and curious, so please explain...
gloria
|
1635.26 | What a deal, Ro! (;^) | TNPUBS::PAINTER | let there be music | Wed Mar 11 1992 17:55 | 1 |
|
|
1635.27 | in her context | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Fri Mar 13 1992 08:21 | 43 |
| The earth is dark. Winter is dark. Greece was an agricultural land.
Its mythology strongly resonated to the farmers of Greece.
Persephone represented the seed that enters the ground in autumn and
sprouts (3 months later) in spring. In one version, she does not
emerge from Hades. Here, the sprouting wheat and ripe wheat are
represented by different deities. In another version, she does emerge,
and represents the planting and sprouting phases. Demeter commonly
represents the harvest phase.
Many traditional societies in Eastern Europe used rape (implying
abduction) symbolism to describe marriage. That is, the bride is
removed from her parents' home by the groom. Some have a mock
abduction ceremony prior to the marriage. In this sense, Persephone's
rape is actually a marriage.
The use of rape in Greek myths is complex, reflecting the invasion of
the indigenous people, who appear to have been matriarchal, by the
patriarchal tribes from the plains to the northeast.
The myth of Persephone and Demeter was integral to the Eleusinian
mysteries. Their culmination was probably the display of a sheaf of
harvested wheat. The mysteries probably related the mystery of the
seasons - a seed (looking dead) from this year's wheat is planted in
the winter ground and miraculously sprouts a new wheat plant several
months later. They probably also equated this with human spiritual
death and rebirth.
Even today, Greek women make a special bread of ground meal and
pomegranate seeds to take to the cemetary. Remember Persephone held a
pomegranate in her hand. In Middle Eastern mythology, the pomegranate
represents both fruitfulness (many seeds) and blood, relating it to
death.
There are many more layers to explore here, but this just gives you a
taste. I highly recommend Robert Graves' books on Greek mythology if
you would like to dig back beyond the classical Greek era.
Certainly I would not view Persephone as negative or evil, nor as
simply a symbol of the oppression of women. She is multifaceted and
rather complex. She also must be viewed in relation to the other gods
and goddesses.
|
1635.28 | on a related note | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Fri Mar 13 1992 08:25 | 7 |
| Oh by the way, Persephone is similar to the Hanged Man in the Tarot
deck. In some decks he is depicted with his head dangling in a hole in
the ground.
If you research Persephone further, be sure to look up Dionysius. He
is the god who is killed, with lots of blood, and is reborn. In one
sense, he is her male counterpart.
|