Project Details
Universal Key to All Mythologies and Primordial Culture: Antiquarianism and Atiology in the 19th Century
Applicant
Professor Dr. Bernd Roling
Subject Area
Greek and Latin Philology
History of Science
History of Science
Term
since 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 458735579
This subproject addresses the universal mythologies of the 18th and 19th centuries and their significance for the exegesis of myth among subsequent folklorists and anthropologists. The material that had earlier been collected and digested into mythological systems was meant to serve, in relation to the history of humani-ty, as an aetiological model of primeval culture. Our approach will be diachronic, cutting across the epochs to look for continuities and transformations within these aetiological narratives, which began already in the great antiquarian origin stories of the 17th and 18th centuries. There will be two focuses. Firstly, the study of feminine mythologies with meteorological connotations, such as storm goddesses, fog witches and White Ladies: across all the paradigm shifts of the myth-systems, these phenomena continually de-manded new explanations and so they become an especially revealing projection surface. The second focus is the work of the 19th-century myth researchers on Baltic and in particular Lithuanian mythology and popular poetry. These researchers had an aetiological ambition, of tracing the genesis of culture back to a material cause, which culminated in narratives of primitivism with an underlying colonialistic momentum. In this context we will ask, among other things, what role folklore studies played in the elaboration of keys to mythologies, how they profited from the material collected by the previous generations and what ideo-logical potential these origin stories developed in the study of foreign cultures.
DFG Programme
Research Units