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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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GLOSSARY OF MYTHOLOGICAL WORDS AND PHRASES IN ENGLISH 773<br />

lize one of his major, defining ideas on the nature of<br />

the human psyche and infantile sexual development;<br />

the Oedipus complex is the term he used to describe<br />

the natural progression of psychosexual development<br />

in which the child has libidinal feelings for a<br />

parent of the opposite sex and hostility for the parent<br />

of the same sex. The term Oedipus complex refers<br />

to the male child. See Electra complex.<br />

Olympic Games/olympian The Greek gods had<br />

their homes on the heights of Mt. Olympus in northern<br />

Greece, and so were called the Olympians. The<br />

term olympian carries with it notions of the new order<br />

ushered in by Zeus and his family and also distinguishes<br />

these gods in their sunlit heights from the<br />

chthonic ("of the earth") deities, who have associations<br />

with the gloom of the underworld. Therefore<br />

olympian means towering, awesome, and majestic,<br />

akin to the gods of Olympus. The adjective can also<br />

refer to one who competes in or has won a contest<br />

in the Olympic Games, but this designation is derived<br />

from the ancient Olympic Games, celebrated at<br />

Olympia, which was a major sanctuary of Zeus in<br />

the Péloponnèse.<br />

paean Paean was an epithet of the god Apollo,<br />

invoked in a cry for victory in battle or for deliverance<br />

from sickness. A paean thus became a song of<br />

thanksgiving. Today it refers to a song of joy or<br />

praise, whether to a god or a human being.<br />

palladium As a child Athena had a special girlfriend<br />

named Pallas, with whom she used to play at<br />

war. During one of their skirmishes Athena inadvertently<br />

killed Pallas, and in her memory she built<br />

a wooden statue of the girl. This statue was thrown<br />

down to earth by Zeus, where it became known as<br />

the Palladium, and became for the Trojans a talisman<br />

for their city; as long as they had possession of it, the<br />

city would stand. Thus the English palladium means<br />

a protection from harm for a people or state, a lucky<br />

charm.<br />

Pandora's box Pandora was the first woman,<br />

given to men as punishment for Prometheus' theft of<br />

fire. Sent with her was a jar, which, when opened,<br />

released all the ills that now plague human beings.<br />

Later this jar became a box, and now Pandora's box<br />

refers to something that should be left unexamined<br />

lest it breed disaster.<br />

panic Panic describes a state of great fear and<br />

anxiety with an attendant desire for flight, which was<br />

considered inspired by the god Pan. See echo.<br />

phaeton Helius, the sun-god, assured Phaëthon<br />

that he was truly his father and swore an oath that<br />

his son could have anything he desired. Phaëthon<br />

asked that he be allowed to drive his father's char­<br />

iot across the sky. Helius could not dissuade the boy,<br />

and Phaëthon could not control the horses and drove<br />

to his death. A phaeton has come into English as a<br />

four-wheeled chariot drawn by two horses or an earlier<br />

type of convertible automobile.<br />

priapism/priapic Priapus was the ithyphallic son<br />

of Aphrodite. He is most often depicted with an enormous<br />

and fully erect penis. Priapic is an adjective referring<br />

to priapian characteristics. Priapism is a<br />

pathological condition in which the penis is persistently<br />

erect.<br />

procrustean/procrustean bed Procrustes (the<br />

"one who stretches") was encountered by Theseus.<br />

He would make unwitting travelers lie down on a<br />

bed. If they did not fit it exactly, he would either cut<br />

them down or stretch them out to size. The adjective<br />

procrustean refers to someone or something that<br />

aims at conformity through extreme methods. A procrustean<br />

bed decribes a terrible, arbitrary standard<br />

against which things are measured.<br />

Prometheus/promethean The god Prometheus<br />

("forethought"), son of the titan Iapetus, was the creator<br />

of humanity and its benefactor. He bestowed<br />

upon mortals many gifts that lifted them from savagery<br />

to civilization. One of his most potent benefactions<br />

was fire, which he stole from heaven in a<br />

fennel stalk to give to mankind, a boon expressly forbidden<br />

by Zeus. As a punishment for his championship<br />

of human beings in opposition to Zeus,<br />

Prometheus was bound to a rocky crag and a vulture<br />

ate at his liver, which would grow back again<br />

for each day's repast. Thus the name Prometheus becomes<br />

synonymous for the archetypal champion,<br />

with fire his symbol of defiance and progress. The<br />

adjective promethean means courageous, creative,<br />

original, and life-sustaining. Beethoven's music may<br />

be called promethean, and Mary Shelley called her<br />

gothic horror novel Frankenstein, A Modern Prometheus.<br />

protean Proteus was a sea-god who could<br />

change shape and who possessed knowledge of the<br />

future. To obtain information, one had to grapple<br />

with him until his metamorphoses ceased. Protean<br />

means of changeable or variable form, or having the<br />

ability to change form.<br />

psyche/psychology, etc. The Greek word for the<br />

soul was psyche. The myth of Cupid and Psyche can<br />

be interpreted as the soul's longing for an eventual<br />

reunification with the divine through love. For Freud<br />

psyche means mind and psychic refers to mental activity;<br />

many English derivatives describe the study<br />

of the mind and the healing of its disorders: psychology,<br />

psychiatry, etc. In psychoanalytic terms, the

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