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Chapter Thirteen, Lecture Two

Chapter Thirteen, Lecture Two. Perseus and the Myths of the Argive Plain. Legends of Perseus. Dana ë and the Shower of Gold. Dana ë and the Shower of Gold. Lynceus (the one spared) in Argos after Dana üs His son Abas has twins Acrisius, rules in Argos Proetus, rules in nearby Tiryns

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Chapter Thirteen, Lecture Two

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  1. Chapter Thirteen, Lecture Two Perseus and the Myths of the Argive Plain

  2. Legends of Perseus Danaë and the Shower of Gold

  3. Danaë and the Shower of Gold • Lynceus (the one spared) in Argos after Danaüs • His son Abas has twins • Acrisius, rules in Argos • Proetus, rules in nearby Tiryns • Acrisius has a daughter, Danaë, but wants sons

  4. Danaë and the Shower of Gold • Oracles says Danaë will have a son, but that he will kill him (Acrisius) • Zeus’s “rain shower” impregnates her • Set adrift in a wooden box • Dictys at Seriphos • Polydectes • Perseus tricked into going on a quest for the head of a Gorgon

  5. Perseus, the Gorgon Slayer

  6. Perseus, the Gorgon Slayer • Gorgons • Stheno • Euryalê • Medusa (the only mortal Gorgon) • Help from the Graeae • “Where can the Gorgons be found?”

  7. Perseus the Gorgon Slayer • Magical implements • Cap of Hades • Winged sandals • The kibisis • Extra sharp sword • Highly polished bronze shield

  8. Perseus the Gorgon Slayer • From the body of Medusa, who was pregnant by Poseidon • Pegasus, later tamed by Bellerophon • Chrysaör • Perseus frees his mother from Polydectes’s aggression with the head of Medusa

  9. Perseus and Andromeda

  10. Perseus and Andromeda • A variant has Perseus returning to Seriphos after a few adventures • Joppa ruled by Cepheus

  11. Perseus and Andromeda • Cepheus’s daughter, Andromeda, about to be sacrificed to a sea monster, because of the rash boast by her mother, Cassiopeä • Perseus given Andromeda and the kingdom for having freed her • Phineus, to whom Andromeda had been betrothed, killed with his men by the head of Medusa

  12. The Death of Acrisius

  13. The Death of Acrisius • Perseus returns to Argos • Acrisius flees (it is fated that Perseus will kill him) • At a sports contest in Thessaly, Perseus accidentally kills him with a stray discus • Trades Argos of Tiryns with Megapenthes, a son of Proetus • Perseus also builds Mycenae

  14. The Death of Acrisius • After a long rule, Perseus and Andromeda become constellations, where their story can be seen

  15. Perseus and Folktale

  16. Perseus and Folktale • Perseus’ tale is nearly a child’s fairy tale • Closest we have to a folktale • The form of the girl’s tragedy for Danaë

  17. Perseus and Folktale • Prohibition • Can’t marry • Seclusion • Locked in a chamber • Violation of the prohibition • The shower • Threat of punishment or death • Set adrift in a box • Liberation • Save by Dictys

  18. Perseus and Folktale • Perseus’s story somewhat like Gilgamesh’s • More emphasis on the quest • Extraordinary birth; his own strength a threat to his family; impossible labors with divine help; rewarded in the end with a kingdom and wife • Differences: no taboo, no male friend

  19. Perseus and Folktale • Perseus devoid of internal struggle and personality • These are adult themes and not a part of folktale • Perhaps the Perseus story circulated as oral tales (for children?) before it was written down

  20. Medusa’s Head

  21. Medusa’s Head • Deeper, psychological meaning? • Freud: Medusa’s head is the female pudenda • A reflection of the social conditions under which a young boy was raised? • The death of Medusa symbolic of the boy’s release from his mother • Overthrown of aboriginal matriarchy ?

  22. Medusa’s Head • Medusa perhaps not an original part of the Perseus story • Homer: • Gorgo on the shield of Agamemnon • Gorgo on the walls of Hades’s palace • When, where, how, and why the “Gorgons” develop their full iconography is not known

  23. Medusa’s Head • Cult of the snake goddess? • Image used as apotropaic device

  24. End

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