Seal, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro |
One proof of this, was, I considered, the richness of
Athenian mythmaking about the goddess, including the popularity of her birth,
itself among the most striking of myths, and the involvement of the goddess in
another exceptional birth – here with herself as the progenitor – that of
Erichthonios. These were serious myths
about the origins of the goddess, and the origins of the goddess’s child who was
in turn the Athenians’ ancestral hero.
Athenian mythology – which I read in line with the 80s and 90s interest
in civic mythmaking and identity – was, I thought, a serious business that
depicted the goddess as appropriately serious. When I discovered that Hermippos had written a play that may well have poked
fun at Athena’s birth – or possibly at the birth of Erichthonios, I found it
hard to make this fit my vision of Athena: the title, Athenas Gonai could mean either
‘Athena’s birth’ or ‘Athena’s children’.
Twenty plus years on, my view of Athena has moved on as
follows – to see Athena as too boring for comedy is to make assumptions about
the goddess that are belied by the evidence. Such notions of a 'boring' Athena are shaped by the postclassical reception of a specific aspects of the ancient goddess as, for instance, the patron of such 'serious' businesses as city-protecting - as received in the array of modern uses of the goddess on emblems, coins and and so forth. This posting is headed by one such 'serious' appropriation of the 'boring' goddess, on the seal of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.
When I was going to give a paper on Athena beyond Athens
in Nottingham in 2005, Alan Sommerstein suggested the title ‘multiple Athenas’
to capture the range of uses of the goddess across the Greek world. Why not extend such an approach beyond how
Athenian representations of the goddess differ from those of say Corinth or
Sparta or Argos or Boiotia or Tegea to differences within Athens itself? If I had started out in 1991 looking at how
each particular genre, and each particular example, constructs the goddess, I
would not have been held back for so long by a quest to understand one particular
thing that the goddess ‘meant’ which I could then apply to the array of
evidence. My response to the array of
previous attempts to pin the goddess down which I’d found limiting was to try
to add my own – hopefully correct – one.
So I put the evidence that did not fit to one side. I was playing the game that others had played
- of trying to push understandings of Athena on by showing what was wrong about
previous models before advancing my own.
The trouble with this approach is that it assumes that there is ever
going to be some key to unlock the meaning of the goddess. Hovering here is a sense that a deity is akin
to a person, with a coherent, however complex, personality. Deities are
akin to persons, but such a model reduces them to this very specific
meaning. Athena has been skewed to fit
the image modern scholars desire to hold – an image of a serious, boring, prude
that says a lot about modern perceptions of the deity but little – and perhaps
even nothing – about how the ancients constructed the goddess.
In this posting, I've shown why the concept of a boring Athena reveals more about modern uses of the goddess by serious institutions such as universities than it does about the ancient goddess. I've not said anything much, however, about what role Athena does actually play in comedy. In the next posting, I plan to set out what I'll say in the encyclopedia entry - I'll show how aspects of Athena were exploited for comic effect in Aristophanes. I'll also show how, as well as showing that the Athenians were not offended at humourous uses of their goddess, this shows just how seriously they took the public roles linked with the goddess that are coming in for comic treatment.
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