The Eternal Return: Oedipus, The Tempest, Forbidden Planet: Tales of the Mythic World, #2
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Father/daughter stories have resonated with readers throughout history, and this current narrative depicts three such relationships encountered in (1) ancient myth, (2) the Elizabethan stage, and (3) modern cinema. Volume one, Introduction to Frankenstein, of this the Tales of the Mythic World series dealt peripherally with the relationship between Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein, and her father, the philosopher William Godwin. In this second volume, titled The Eternal Return, we encounter more directly three literary relationships: Oedipus and Antigone from Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus, Prospero and Miranda from Shakespeare's The Tempest, and Morbius and Altaira from the 1956 movie Forbidden Planet.
The reason for treating all three in a single narrative is that they are related. Forbidden Planet is a known derivative of The Tempest, but The Tempest is also related to Oedipus at Colonus, either intentionally or not, and the totality of the Oedipus myth is related to Forbidden Planet. The relationship between all three goes even deeper through what the psychologist Carl Jung called the Collective Unconscious. So come with the author as he explores this amazing phenomenon of the human psyche called the Eternal Return.
David Sheppard
David Sheppard is the author of Story Alchemy: The Search for the Philosopher's Stone of Storytelling, and Novelsmithing: The Structural Foundation of Plot, Character, and Narration. He is also the author of the non-fiction work Oedipus on a Pale Horse, and the novel The Mysteries, A Novel of Ancient Eleusis (two volumes). He holds a bachelor's from Arizona State and a master's from Stanford University. He also studied creative writing and American Literature at the University of Colorado. His poetry has appeared in The Paris Review and in England (The 1987 Arvon International Poetry Competition Anthologyjudged by Ted Hughes and Seamus Heaney). While living in Colorado he was a member of the Rocky Mountain Writers Guild for seven years, participated in its Live Poets Society and Advanced Novel Workshop, and chaired its Literary Society. He founded a novel critique group that lasted ten years. He has attended the Aspen Writers Conference in Colorado and the Sierra Writing Camp in California. He has taught Novel Writing and Greek Mythology at New Mexico State University at Carlsbad. He has traveled throughout western Europe and is an amateur photographer and astronomer.
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The Eternal Return - David Sheppard
Tales of the Mythic World
Volume II
The Eternal Return:
Oedipus, The Tempest, Forbidden Planet
by
David Sheppard
SMASHWORDS EDITION
*****
PUBLISHED BY:
David Sheppard (Tragedy's Workshop) on Smashwords
The Eternal Return:
Oedipus, The Tempest, Forbidden Planet
Copyright 2012 by David Sheppard
ISBN 13: 978-1-4762-8366-1
ISBN 10: 1-4762-8366-4
Cover photo: Temple of Apollo at Delphi
taken by the author, Fall of 1993
Smashwords Edition License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person with whom you share it. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.
The Eternal Return:
Oedipus, The Tempest, Forbidden Planet
by
David Sheppard
Table of Contents
Author's Note
Chapter 1: Oedipus at Colonus
Chapter 2: The Tempest
Chapter 3: Oedipus Tyrannus
Chapter 4: Forbidden Planet
Epilogue
Endnotes
Bibliography
Author's Note
Sometimes those of us who spend our lives searching for some bit of knowledge that will help make sense of life here on planet Earth come to the end of the road. We then have a choice: to turn back and end our intellectual journey or proceed, to wade a ways out into the weeds and scrub brush. We stand a chance of becoming lost in a chaotic philosophical wilderness and even risk losing, if not our minds, at least our sense of purpose, which can result in sickness of the soul. But it's worth the chance because, if our intuition has served us well, we will stumble out of the bushes to find ourselves at an intellectual height where we can overlook the vase reaches of the human endeavor and gain a fresh perspective. This present work, whereupon you are about to embark, is the result of such a journey. It's not an imaginative work, nor is it even one of great creativity, but is only a portion of an observation of where mankind has come so far.
The idea for this work originated in a science fiction film series, which I hosted at New Mexico State University – Carlsbad in 1998. One of the films was the 1931 version of Frankenstein, which was loosely based on the Mary Shelly novel. While researching the origins of Mary's story, I became interested, not only in her life, but also the message apparent in the subtitle, Or, The Modern Prometheus. Then in the fall of 2001, the American Library Association advertised a traveling exhibit titled, Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature. The stated objective of the display was to encourage "audiences to examine the intent of Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, and to discuss Shelley's and their own views about personal and societal responsibility as it relates to science and other areas of life. Since I am an author/engineer/scientist, I am interested in the social implications of all technological and scientific discoveries, particularly when they concern what might be considered
forbidden knowledge." We were unable to get the exhibit for our university branch, but it started me thinking about writing an essay on the subject. Gradually, the concept evolved into the current work, of which the first volume, Introduction to Frankenstein: Origins and Aftermath, has been previously published. In that first volume, I started with Genesis and established the nature and origin of forbidden knowledge, which is at the heart of the continuing narrative. Although not absolutely necessary, a reading of that volume will be of benefit in understanding the material in this.
I've provided an overarching title for the series, Tales of the Mythic World. All of these essays do have forbidden knowledge as a unifying theme. I am currently working on a third volume that will take a mythological look at scientific milestones such as Sir Isaac Newton's Laws of Motion and Einstein's Theory of Relativity that eventually led to the creation of the atomic bomb. That volume will end with an essay on J. R. R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, which I believe is one of the few serious fictional works to explore the question of how to put the genie back in the bottle.
A ways into the writing of these essays, I had a dream. I stood on a dark mountain at night overlooking a brilliant sea of city lights, a magnificent future world. A man in a gray cloak stood in front of me, a little to the right. He turned and looked back at me, as if to say, See? All this is possible.
Then the scene was interrupted by a line of mushroom clouds, similar to the line of bombs dropped on Baghdad during Shock and Awe
at the start of the war with Saddam Hussein, but these were atomic bombs and not those of conventional warfare. I realized that my dream was directed, not at me, but at our times.
I woke, slowly, and as the mists of sleep faded, the name of one man came to mind, Teiresias. Teiresias was a seer in ancient Greece, a priest of Apollo, and though blind, could see the future and knew the will of the gods. He'd advised the kings of Thebes: Kadmos, Oedipus, Creon and many others. Years after he died, famous Odysseus came to see him in the Underworld to learn his way home from Troy. Teiresias was the only man to retain an unclouded mind in the Afterlife.
Some years ago, I traveled Greece for ten weeks, a pilgrimage of sorts, visiting many archeological and religious sites: Delphi, Ithaca, Troy. I also visited Thebes, and while there had some unsettling experiences, epiphanies really, concerning my own life. (See Oedipus on a Pale Horse.) Upon my return home, when analyzing my voyage and writing about it, I realized that, while traveling that ancient land, I had been in the hands of the gods in the literal sense. (See Encountering Hermes.) Because of this and other strange occurrences, I've learned to take heed of dreams and experiences that seem meaningful, even though to do so I might appear to be chasing specters. This dream I'd just had concerning Teiresias seemed to cast a new light on the writing of this book.
I write in voices. I can exhaustively research, but I can't really start writing a book until I find the right voice to tell the story. Some call it channeling, but I'm a little suspicious of that. I will say this: Teiresias, with his unclouded mind and residence in the world of the divine, could possibly have visibility of all things past and future. This book could be a warning from Teiresias, and these tales I've written here could all be, not only mine, but also his tales of the mythic world.
CHAPTER 1: Oedipus at Colonus
…the primitive foundations of the human soul are … profound time-sources where the myth has its home and shapes the primeval norms and forms of life. For the myth is the foundation of life; it is the timeless schema, the pious formula to which life flows when it reproduces its traits out of the unconscious. Thomas Mann, Freud and the Future.
And I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly: I perceived that this also is vexation of spirit. For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow. Ecclesiastes 1:17-18
In 406 BC, four years before the final defeat of Athens in the Peloponnesian War, a funeral procession slowly negotiated the foothills along the slope of Mt. Parnassus northeast of Athens into enemy territory to the burial grounds at Decelea. Sparta, who'd laid siege to Athens, allowed the passage out of respect for the holy corpse. None other than Dionysus himself, patron god of theatre, guarded the funeral train. So the story goes. [1]
The man who'd died had been seven when the Athenians defeated the Persians in the land battle at Marathon and seventeen when he danced naked at the Isthmus of Corinth during the celebration following the victory over the Persians in the sea battle at Salamis. At the tender age of twenty-seven, on his initial attempt as a dramatic poet, he'd won his first victory as in the City Dionysia over the seasoned Aeschylus. He was a close friend of Pericles, Athens' first citizen, but also friends with Pericles' political enemy Cimon. He'd housed the healing god Asclepius, in serpent form, in his own home until a temple for the god could be built and had been elected to the Board of Generals during the war with Samos. He'd served as treasurer of the Delian League.
The acclaimed corpse was that of ninety-year-old Sophocles. Sophocles was the quintessential Athenian, intelligent, good looking and mild mannered, and in the years following his death, he would be worshiped as Dexion, the Receiver.
[2] Burial rites of the time [3] included the washing of the deceased with seawater by women, and dressing the corpse in an ankle-length robe. An obol coin was inserted between the lips as payment to the mythical ferryman Charon for passage across the Styx to the Underworld. They closed the eyes and kept the lips shut with a chinstrap. The body was generally cremated on a pyre, as Trelawny would Shelley's body millennia later. [See Introduction to Frankenstein: Origins and Aftermath.] The remaining bones were then put in a vase and buried in the family plot.
The death of Sophocles signaled the end of an era. Not only was it the end of the greatest creative period for ancient Greece, but it also signaled the coming end of democracy in Athens. Sparta had already won the war and all that was left was for the final battles to play out.
The much-loved tragic poet had just finished his