The Labyrinth of the Heart: Changed Myths for Changing Lives
By Daniel Cohen
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About this ebook
Myths and folktales are retold in this book against the grain of the conventional tellings (which is why the subtitle refers to “Changed Myths”), as well as some new stories in a similar vein. My stories present new images of male heroes, who do not need to use violence to reach their goals. The stories are informed by the insights of goddess spirituality and feminism.
Daniel Cohen
Dr. Cohen has degrees in anthropology and biology, and his research focuses on the intersection of religious studies, neuropsychology, and neuroscience. He completed a Fulbright-Hays fellowship in India where he studied cultural interpretations and traditional religious resources used in treating mental health disorders (as understood by western standards), physical ailments, and social tensions. He has published numerous articles on the neuropsychology of spiritual experiences, including studies involving U.S. and South Asian populations.
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The Labyrinth of the Heart - Daniel Cohen
What others say about this book
Daniel draws on ancient texts, myths, ballads and tales with an insightful new twist, wry and uniquely his own.
It’s a lovely little book, some of it absolutely great. I especially like the midrash on Eve.
Robin Williamson (bard, storyteller, founder-member of the Incredible String Band.)
These retellings are brave, beautiful and original, combining a genuine appreciation of the original myths and legends with a rigorous new system of ethics. They are a fresh illustration of the eternal truth that good stories will live for ever, providing that they can still find good storytellers to adapt them.
Ronald Hutton (author of The Triumph of the Moon, The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles, and many other books and articles.)
Cohen’s stories teach us insights into gender roles, especially those involving heroism today. They are self-conscious as he recognizes that they want to be told through him, but they are never boringly didactic. Story itself shines forth as creatrix/creator – not of banalities, but richly of fantasies.
This author sees behind stories’ seams through his critical eye and voice. His Theseus (or Perseus) is no muscle-bound gym-rat, but a male who returns to Ariadne, having confronted his brother deep inside the labyrinth, and celebrates her re-weaving the crucial thread as a connection now between the ordinary world and the mysteries of the deep labyrinth.
These are long-polished re-viewing and re-insighting narratives of classical and late-European versions of magical shoes and trees and tricksters, biblical midrashim, Goddesses and Scottish salmon, characters such as Arawn and Pwyll. They make me wish I had children to tell them to (oh, yeah, a buddy’s girls, they’ll giggle with delight). Notes at the end explain starting points for these engaging narratives.
William G. Doty (author of Myths: a Handbook, Myths of Masculinity, and other writings on myth.)
Daniel Cohen's retellings of Greek and Celtic myths take my breath away and make my spine tingle, pointing the way to a transformation of the cultures of domination that have shaped our world, causing so much damage to all of us and the web of life.
Carol P. Christ (author Rebirth of the Goddess and She Who Changes.)
This small but mould-shattering volume left me stunned and breathless many times over. There is much power in these stories that will inspire both male and female readers without leaving either feeling in any way less important or vital to the truth and power within the myths.
Wildheart
I have to tell you, without sentimentality, just how much the book has come to mean to me. As a woman, I recognised the Theseus who thought he had killed the animal in him, and am thankful that it was a stage in his journey. I am profoundly glad to know of the Theseus who embraced his brother and visits him at the appropriate time. This alone is such a healing story that I have told it to people I meet, writers and psychotherapists and friends. On an academic level, your Theseus was exactly what I needed to side-step the false duality of gender stereotypes in mythic material.
Sandy Hutchinson-Nunns
They’re remarkable in many ways. First, his fables about men and the Goddess illuminate women and men’s relationships with each other. More, the writing transforms these relationships.
Francesca De Grandis (author of Bardic Alchemy: Enchanted Tales about the Quest for God/dess and Self)
THE LABYRINTH OF THE HEART
Changed Myths for Changing Lives
Daniel Cohen
Smashwords Edition
Copyright Daniel Cohen 2010. All rights reserved.
Except as covered by the Creative Commons license and the permission for oral storytelling, given below you may not reproduce or transmit this publication or material from this publication in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the author. Such requests can be directed to d dot e dot cohen at qmul dot ac dot uk
Daniel Cohen asserts his moral right to be identified as the author of this book.
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be 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 you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
The individual stories and their notes (except for Taste and See, which is by Daniel Cohen, but is copyright Equinox Publications) are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/; or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 2nd Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.
Stories like to be told. Therefore Daniel Cohen specifically states that oral retelling of these stories (except for Taste and See) to a live audience is permitted provided due credit is given to the author and the book, and that any such use is considered by him to be non-commercial even if the performers are paid.
~~~~~~~~~
Dedicated to all those in whom the Goddess has shown Herself to me.
Most especially to the memory of Asphodel Long (1921–2005), companion and guide on the journey. Her life and her work are good enough reasons for the world to turn.
CONTENTS
Preface
Surprising the Soul: the Secret of Stories (Introduction)
The Story of The Story (the Beginning)
The Heart of the Labyrinth
Face of Wisdom, Face of Dread
Maiden and Monster
Circe’s Bard
The Ferryman
The Biggest Dung-Heap in the World
Happy the Land that Needs No Heroes
The First Casualty of War
The Sleeping Beauty
What Women Most Desire
The Singer’s Lost Love
Of Power, Good Counsel, and Wisdom
Esmeralda’s Quest
The Interpreter: or An Introduction to Hermeneutics
New Shoes for New Weather
A Successful Experiment?
Taste and See
The Man Who Did Not Like Spiders
The Mathematician Who Had Little Wisdom
The Ballad of Jack Green
Three Worlds, Two Queens, One Prince
The Seer in the Hawthorn Tree
Pity the Poor Emigrant
Johnny Faa’s Indictment
The Dancer and the Dance
The Story of The Story (completed)
Notes
Booklist
Acknowledgements
NOTES AND NAVIGATION
I have tried to include in each story the conventional telling, in some form. In addition, the notes to the stories provide more information about their origin and what inspired my versions.
This e-book can be navigated by means of clickable links. Click on any item in the Contents list to go to the corresponding item. Click on the separating ~~~~~~~~~ at the end of each story to get to the notes for that story. Click on the title of a story or a note to get back to the Contents.
~~~~~~~~~
PREFACE
I’ve read no better storyteller than Daniel Cohen. And my standards are high. So if my words seem like hype, be assured: I mean them from the bottom of my heart.
His stories are not just remarkable. They’re remarkable in many ways. First, his fables about men and the Goddess illuminate women and men’s relationships with each other. More, the writing transforms these relationships.
Yet there is more: Cohen addresses the human longing for Faerie tales with heroes. We have a real need for magical champions, but not male heroes who dominate. Daniel reveals the hero who instead relates.
Yet there is more: The tales are not just about gender and Deity; they are universal, touching the core of mysticism and freedom from dogma. The bard’s job is to change the stories we tell, and thereby alter the entire pattern of how we live. Cohen deserves the title bard. His narratives need to be told and I, surely, need to hear them.
And there is more: Daniel’s brain encompasses the enormity of details that comprise real life, so that he makes fine distinctions that other storytellers might miss. His understanding repeatedly makes me sigh with relief and recognition, and say, Yes, yes, yes!
Finally, Daniel is touched by something otherworldly. This makes me feel I am not alone as I adventure along meandering trails through far reaches of the cosmos.
Yes, when Daniel spins a tale, I laugh with joy at his mysticism and perceptive wit, sigh with relief, find healing through his gifts, and celebrate this fine storyteller.
Francesca De Grandis, author of Bardic Alchemy: Enchanted Tales about the Quest for God/dess and Self
~~~~~~~~~
INTRODUCTION
Surprising the Soul: the Secret of Stories
All myths central to a culture survive through a process of continual reinterpretation, satisfying the contradictory needs of individuals and society for images and narratives of both continuity and transformation. Vital myths are paradoxically both public and private, they encode both consent to and dissent from existing power structures, and they have at all times the potential for being interpreted both officially and subversively.
(Alicia Ostriker. Feminist Revision and the Bible. p. 28)
Pico believed it was important to surprise the soul through interpretations of images and stories. Since interpretation consists chiefly in discovering new images among the old, the surprise Mercury brings is a new image or a new idea, a gift from the cunning god who knows how to stir the soul.
(Thomas Moore. Care of the Soul. p. 152)
Stories form a prism through which we see the world.
We define our lives by the stories we tell ourselves and each other about our childhoods, friends, work, ambitions, and hopes. We may see ourselves as the golden child who can do no wrong or as a failure in whatever we do. In their emotional life, men may see themselves as Don Juan or Casanova, women as Cinderella looking for Prince Charming or as Beauty taming the Beast. We may create our own stories, or we may try to fit ourselves into old stories or into the stories told by our families (who may classify us as the clever one
or the artistic one
among our brothers and sisters).
We live in two worlds, the world of facts, which we call the real world, and the world of stories, which we call the world of imagination or fantasy. Many people think the world of imagination is unimportant. But there is no meaning in the world of facts. All meaning comes from the world of stories, which makes it supremely important.
As we share each other’s stories, we learn about ourselves, and, even more importantly, about our connections with each other and our similarities and differences.
We learn, too, from publicly told stories, whether in novels, films, or even popular songs or in the older form of oral storytelling, which is experiencing a revival, though it had at one time almost died out.
Public stories help define our culture. They tell us what is permissible and what is not, what and who is admired, and how we wish to treat each other.
Old stories that have survived have great power, because they relate to matters that have remained important through many changes in society. That is why they have survived.
By changing the stories we tell we can change our understanding and behaviour. But do we have to find new stories or can we take the old stories and tell them in a different way?
Many people, especially devotees of Jung and Campbell, think that there is only one correct way of telling a myth or traditional tale.
But this isn’t so. Authors as diverse as the fantasy writer Neil Gaiman and the scholar Wendy Doniger and others have pointed this out. Gaiman emphasises the ways each teller imposes their own personality and concerns on the telling, and the richness this gives to the stories. Doniger points out the social and political content of myths, which can be used both to support and to subvert the dominant patterns.
An extreme example of different was of telling a story is shown in the folk-tale The Fairy Midwife. At one point in this story, a woman, after putting ointment on one eye, sees differently with the two eyes. With one eye she sees reality, with the other eye glamour. With one eye she sees a rich mansion, with the other a poor hut. But which of the mansion and the hut is reality and which is glamour? I’ve heard two versions of this story that contradict each other at this crucial point, and so give completely different accounts of the relationship between the two worlds.
The Greek myths are among the most well-known of the old stories to those cultures stemming from Europe — they