A Proposal on the Study of Mythologies, Applied to the Characters of Sun, Fire, Wind, an Rain

Autores/as

  • Donald Bahr Arizona State University

Resumen

This paper concerns mythologies of the Yavapais, Maricopas, Pimas, and Huichols, all of whom live in, or at least visit, deserts and the related elements of sun and fire. This preliminary study of the impact of desert on tribal mythology stems from the following theoretical points: first that mythologies are interested in sun, fire, wind, and rain to the extent that they render those things as characters rather than as impersonal elements.  Second that in what I call miniregions mythologies differ largely because of parody phenomenon. And third that a “mythology” comprises all of the texts that one tribal narrator tells in the order the narrator arranges them. In this manner, this paper both sets an agenda for measuring the impact of deserts on myth and introduces authorship and authority into the study of tribal mythologies. 

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Biografía del autor/a

Donald Bahr, Arizona State University

Estadounidense. Doctor en antropología por la Universidad de Harvard y profesor e investigador en la Arizona State University. Actualmente es investigador  asociado del Southwest  Center of the University of Arizona. Es autor, entre otros libros, de O’odham creation  and related events (University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 2001) y Ants and orioles. Showing the art of Pima poetry (The University  of Utah Press Salt Lake City, 1997).

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Publicado

2006-01-01

Cómo citar

Bahr, D. (2006). A Proposal on the Study of Mythologies, Applied to the Characters of Sun, Fire, Wind, an Rain. Culturales, 2(3), 132–158. Recuperado a partir de https://culturales.uabc.mx/index.php/Culturales/article/view/28

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