“Exercising the Artifacts” – Interview with Mythologist Willi Paul by Arthur George to Support the Mythic Roundtable at Granada Books, Santa Barbara on 1/22/15.
Willi: Thank you to my fellow mythologist Arthur George for this interview, author of the excellent The Mythology of Eden.
Arthur: In July and again in September, I posted here 2 conversations I had with my friend and fellow mythologist Willi Paul about the “new myths” and creative mythology. Willi will be leading a roundtable on creating new myths at the Granada Book Store in Santa Barbara, California, on January 22, so we thought it would be timely to discuss here on my blog – Mythology Matters - the ideas he will be presenting there. Our conversation is below.
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Interview with Willi by Arthur
1. How do the “new myths” differ (if at all) in content and/or purpose compared with traditional myths?
Lately I am seeing this “old vs. new” myth debate forming a hybrid set in that many plots and heroes from classic mythology can support the messages in the new myths of the Climate Change Age. We see that new myths reflect the universal issues of 2015: species extinction, terrorism, GMO and drought to name a few. Let’s take the journey, initiation and hero triad from Joseph Campbell’s work and support new community survival songs, poems and tales. While technology enables both new and old mythologies to be experienced on a tablet or a home browser, new myths require a new vision and design – and intervention. See Myth Lab.
Also, there are many types of mythologies to drive a new planet consciousness including creative, creation, classic, apocalyptic, sound, and mythopoeic. I am working on a Unified Model of Mythology to better understand this synergy moving forward.
2. What is the creative source for the new myths? How is human psychology involved?
Sources include boredom with the classic myths and our destruction of Nature and each other. I believe that we all artists with the capacity to reach inwards and outwards to experience bliss. Meditation is a key source for the creative.
In a recent exploration into depth psychology, I proposed the following Permaculture & Nature Archetypes and their Symbols:
+ Permaculture & Nature Archetype: A love to preserve unique landscapes for future generations. Mistrust of greedy, short-term land and energy developers
Symbols: Tree of Life, Permaculture logo, Yosemite, Seeds, Amazon Rain Forest, US Gulf Coast
+ Permaculture & Nature Archetype: Our hope is to build sustainable systems in our local neighborhoods and towns. Fear of food and fuel shortages; fights for resources between neighbors and governments
Symbols: Crude oil on rails, GMO; Convergence and sharing expo events; neighborhood plans and new rituals
+ Permaculture & Nature Archetype: A deep love for freedom to own fire arms; fear of guns and killing.
Symbols:: AK-47, US Flag, Scenes from mass shootings, vigils, pawn shops
+ Permaculture & Nature Archetype: Fear that global warming will destroy all life on Earth. Mistrust of business and goal of short-term profits
Symbols: Rising coastal tides, melting polar ice, coal fired power plants.
+ Permaculture & Nature Archetype: Mistrust of energy privatization and corrupt safety practices. Love of the system and blind faith in corporate responsibility
Symbols: BP, PG&E, Duke Energy
Archetypes can be seen as conscious and unconscious “code” to build and advance human evolution. The Internet is our primary broadcaster for new archetypes, symbols and new myths. Like software code – it is complied, tested and re-written over and over throughout history. Heroes update the data and write the new code.
3. Can you summarize the process for constructing a “new myth” for the present age? How does this differ from how the traditional myths were composed (to the extent we understand this)?
New Myth makers need initiation and tools to guide them. Reading Campbell and other leading authors, including Mircea Eliade and JRR Tolkien. Many see a new mythology channels in Star Wars. Ultimately new myths will rise from our personal interaction with community, Nature and Sci-fi and less from formal western religions.
I often engineer new myths by using the Five Stages of the Myth Lab Process Model:
Step 1: Discover the Artifact
The Artifact is a Nature-Human combination. Some examples include graffiti, a bill board message, an historic sculpture, and a permaculture garden, all with hidden special powers and messages to the neighborhood.
Step 2: Analyze the Artifact
The Artifact can evoke a magical journey or a mythic struggle and is the foundation focus or primer for new symbols and the imprinting and creation that follows.
Step 3: Mythic Imprintation
Imprinting is defined as a two-way interaction with a selected Artifact that generates synergistic meaning for both participants and the Artifact. Called “mythic imprinting” in the Myth Lab, this iterative and transmutative stage is grounded in the initiation, journey and hero work from Joseph Campbell and is one way that neighborhood artifacts can help neighbors generate new songs, poems and myths.
Step 4: Create New Myth #42
1. What did you like about the Artifact? Describe the visual and sonic messages in the forest journey.
2. Did the Artifact remind you of any story or song from your childhood? How?
3. Did the piece heighten your senses or support a new vision for you? Please describe.
Step 5: Share the Journey and New Myth with the Community
This is the Hero’s duty.
Here some of my favorite New Myths from the Lab:
Forest Vibrations * Sacred Lights, Children’s Video – New Myth #42,...
Land Sky River Stars – New Myth #46, Myth Lab #5
“The LightDNA Boys from the Blue-Green Galaxy” – New Myth #49, Myth...
4. What, if any, role does one’s community play in developing new myths, or as serving as content in these myths? How large or small in scope is the community?
The community is our extended family. Through localization, our neighbors can become our news sharers, vegetable farmers and spirit guides. Here is a wise and caring future template for new myths. Now Mount Olympus becomes East Oakland and a Myers lemon tree is a powerful symbol of community zest and sustainability.
5. In light of the role of ritual in many traditional myths, what kinds of rituals do you envisage as taking place in connection with new myths? Perhaps you have some examples?
I am generating mostly new community sharing rituals that by-pass the “Wal-Mart price point,” throw-away scene that drains our spirits.
Please consider these examples of new rituals:
Rituals of the Return (via Transition Movement)
“Nature is not a Ritual” – Online Roundtable Topic
5 New Nature-based Rituals for the Permaculture Transition
Our road share prayer ritual for
Cascadia’s Light Network. New Myth 33
“Spring Holidays & Transition Tales 3.” Transition Palo Alto’s ...
6. How can music (or other sounds) constitute a myth in whole or in part (supporting it)?
While I understand that few are trained to hear sounds as symbols (or myths), this is where I started my work in sonic mythology. If you create a lattice of interacting elements that includes words, graphic symbols, soundbytes and a unifying score, the artifact(s) can emerge and a story can unfold.
See this synergy at work in:
DUSK – Sound – Symbol – SCORE Design for Children’s Permaculture St...
I do envision a day in the near future where humans will close their eyes and experience new myths and rituals.
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Tools & Inspiration for Creating New Myths
A Mythic Roundtable
Presenter: Willi Paul, Planetshifter.com Magazine
Granada Book Store 1224 State Street
Santa Barbara, CA January 22, 2015 7 – 8:30 PM
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