Blog #2 - Literacy & Learning
Reading
the epic poem Beowulf was not a provoking experience per se. Grendel,
his mother, and the dragon were reminiscent of the monsters depicted in other myths
from around the world, and Beowulf’s extraordinary exploits echoed the heroic
actions of other mythical figures. Watching the 2007 film rendition of the epic,
however, was an unsettling experience. It seems that my imagination was not especially
active while reading the poem, and the movie caught me unaware. When reading
the poem, I did not attempt to imagine the horror of a human being devoured by
a monster, but the movie forced me to see it. And that horror, in turn, evoked
many questions: Why were ancient humans obsessed with monsters? Where did the
fear of monsters originate? And how could humans from different cultures
imagine the same monster; namely, the dragon?
As
I navigated these questions, the monsters featured in the Egyptian Book of
the Dead, which we visited a few weeks earlier, came to both haunt and
inspire me. I came to realize that the monsters in both texts are projections
of our worst fears. Beowulf depicts monsters that bear the burden of our
worldly fears while the monsters featured in The Book of the Dead incarnate
our fear of afterworld retribution for our worldly sins. But why is fear so
central to human nature regardless of culture and geographical location?
Physical
anthropologists explain our common human fear in evolutionary terms. Accordingly,
ancient people’s obsession with monsters, as reflected in their myths, is a
residue of the struggle of early humans to survive in a world that abounded in
predators. Yet, this residual fear of predators that they inherited from their
early ancestors is not the only factor that accounts for the abundance of
monsters in so many ancient cultures. Some ancient humans must have come across
fossils of dinosaurs, and in the absence of modern scientific tools, they must
have considered them the bones of human-devouring monsters. Indeed, dragons, as
imagined in different cultures, bear a strong physical resemblance to certain dinosaurs.
Inability
to explain natural phenomena is yet another factor that can account for our
shared human obsession with monsters. Volcanos, earthquakes, and tsunamis must
have bewildered ancient people. No wonder the ancient Japanese would attribute
earthquakes, for example, to a giant fish, Namazu, shaking of its tale. In this
sense, myths are valuable not only for students of history and other human
sciences, but for researchers within other fields, too. Myths can be valuable
tools for geologists who study the history of Earth, for example, as they
provide hints about the geography and climate of Earth in ancient times.
Moreover, major natural phenomena described in myths often reflect actual
events; for myths are not realms of only imagination. Oftentimes, myths reflect
actual events that are then interpreted in supernatural terms.
The
actual scientific worth of myths apart, however, it is the symbolic element of
myths that I find most captivating. Beowulf, who may have well been inspired by
an actual person, is depicted in the epic poem in such a manner as to incarnate
all the virtues that Christianity, a newcomer to the region at the time, was
supposed to bestow on humanity. Selfless, altruistic, risking his life to save
that of his fellow humans, loved and protected by God, he set out to battle the
forces of evil that threatened the stability of human society and that would
never aspire to God’s love and protection. The need for an almost “superhuman” human
to battle the monstrous forces of evil reflect a deep-seated fear and a masked
awareness that humans are very fragile. In fact, religion itself serves to ease
that fear and that awareness by reassuring us that God is in charge and
protecting us. Hence, Beowulf, like other myths, is best read within the
context of the development of religion to answer for human needs in different
historical contexts.
Again
and again, the texts to which I am exposed in this class teach me that there is
a deep-seated common human nature that transcends our cultural differences. The
myths we study from different cultures echo similar themes and motifs. Even the
monsters to which I paid little attention before are now emerging as a
commonality between all of us. The poor imaginary creatures are no more than
projections of our worst fears, some we have inherited from our early
ancestors, and others we have developed in specific historical contexts. In the
present historical context, technology has turned our attention in a different
direction, and our monsters have metamorphosed as a result. Fear has now taken
the shape of an extraterrestrial creature who might be lurking somewhere in the
universe waiting to conquer us all, or a virus that some think is our own
creation and others think have emerged from the wilderness. Yet, no matter the
projection, fear has united us all as humans throughout history.
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