Chapter 20
The Structural Study of
        Myth—
  Claude Levi-Strauss
  Two Kinds of Readings in This
            Chapter
• Claude Levi-Strauss
• Edmund Leach on Levi-Strauss
              Vocabulary
• Chthonian—a creature that comes from or
  is related to the earth
• Autochthonous—springing from the earth
• Synchronic—happening at the same
  moment of time
• Diachronic—including a range of different
  times
        How to Study a Myth
• Levi-Strauss believed that
  – in order to understand a myth, you need to
    assemble all the known versions of it
  – a myth is a kind of language that expresses
    the values found in a culture
How to Read the Oedipus Table
• Read left to right, row by row, the chart
  explains the story of Oedipus in
  chronological order.
• Read from the top of each column to the
  bottom, from the first column to the last,
  the chart analyzes the story of Oedipus
  into the four most important relationships
  Levi-Strauss found in it, as listed at the
  tops of the columns.
Overvaluing Kinship       Undervaluing Kinship        Men Kill Monsters   Men Are Monsters
Cadmus seeks his
sister Europa, ravished
by Zeus.
                                                      Cadmus kills the
                                                      dragon.
                          The Sparta kill one
                          another.
                                                                          Labdacus (Laius’
                                                                          father) = lame
                          Oedipus kills his father.                       Laius (Oedipus’ father)
                                                                          = left-sided
                                                      Oedipus kills the
                                                      Sphinx.
                                                                          Oedipus = swollen-foot
Oedipus marries his
mother, Jocasta.
                          Eteocles kills his
                          brother, Polyneices.
Antigone buries her
brother, Polyneices,
despite prohibition.
       The Structural Method
Extreme                   Example
• Overrating blood        • Incest
  relationships
• Underrating blood       • Killing your father
  relationships
• Monsters being slain    • Death of the Sphinx
• Difficulty in walking   • Oedipus’ damaged
  straight and standing     feet
  upright
                 Tricksters
• Myth progresses from “the awareness of
  oppositions toward their resolution” (p. 288)
• Tricksters act as mediators between oppositions.
• Opposites with no mediator tend to be replaced
  by opposites with a mediator: that’s how we get
  from the life-death opposition to the trickster
  figures Raven and Coyote.
         Raven and Coyote
• The first pair is life-death and has no
  intermediary (p. 288).
• This pair is replaced by the related pair
  agriculture-warfare whose intermediary is
  hunting.
• This pair is replaced by the related pair
  herbivorous animals-beasts of prey whose
  intermediary is carrion-eating animals like
  ravens and coyotes.
      Ash Boy and Cinderella
• These figures are mediators between opposites
  in America (Ash Boy) and Europe (Cinderella).
• They are what Victor Turner (Ch. 26) calls
  “liminal figures” which are on the threshold
  between two different worlds. They are outside
  the power structure looking in, and inside the
  values of the society, looking out at those who
  do not respect them.
   Edmund Leach’s Analysis of
         Levi-Strauss
• Leach presents us with a discussion that shows how
  Levi-Strauss’ ideas work for other Greek stories related
  to that of Oedipus.
• The pattern in these stories is the same as that found in
  the story of Oedipus by Levi-Strauss.
• The stories we include of Leach’s examples are:
   –   Cadmus—who founded Thebes, where Oedipus is king
   –   Laius—Oedipus’ father
   –   Oedipus himself
   –   Oedipus’ children
The Main Oppositions
      Cadmus, Europa, and the
          Dragon’s Teeth
• Bull (Zeus) carries away Europa, who has a
  human child, Minos. – Mediation between divine
  and human
• Europa has a human brother, Cadmus, who
  follows her. – Overvaluing kinship
• Cadmus is required to sacrifice a cow, sent from
  the gods, and in the process, he kills a monster
  from whose remains come live humans. – Men
  kill monsters
• nature : culture :: gods : men
 Laius, Chrysippus, and Jocasta
• During the reign of Lycus, Amphion, and Zethus (an
  earlier, omitted story), Laius is banished and befriended
  by Pelops. He falls in love with Pelops’ son, Chrysippus,
  whom he teaches to drive a chariot. – Incest : Exogamy
• After returning to the throne of Thebes, Laius marries
  Jocasta but avoids sleeping with her because of the
  prophecy that her son will kill him. The conception that
  results in the birth of Oedipus follows a bout of lust when
  Laius has got drunk at a religious feast.
                Oedipus
• Oedipus is exposed on a mountaintop. –
  Undervaluing kinship
• Oedipus kills Laius “at the crossroads.” –
  Undervaluing kinship
• Oedipus kills the Sphinx. – Men kill
  monsters
• Oedipus marries Jocasta. – Overvaluing
  kinship
   Argives – Antigone, Eteocles,
          and Polyneices
• Oedipus has two sons, Eteocles and Polyneices, who
  are supposed to hold the throne alternately. Eteocles
  takes the throne first and refuses to give it up. –
  Undervaluing kinship
• Polyneices is banished and leads an army of heroes
  from Argos against Thebes. The expedition fails.
  Eteocles and Polyneices kill each other. – Undervaluing
  kinship
• Antigone, in defiance of Creon, performs funeral rites
  over Polyneices. – Overvaluing kinship
• In punishment, she is walled up alive in a tomb, where
  she commits suicide. Later, the sons of the dead heroes
  lead another expedition against Thebes and are
  triumphant. – Overvaluing kinship