American Hero-Myths – Daniel Garrison Brinton

20.00

American Hero-Myths by Daniel Garrison Brinton, published first time in 1892, is still today one of the most important contributions to the comparative study of religions and an endeavor to present in a critically correct light some of the fundamental conceptions which are found in the native beliefs of the tribes of America.

The importance of the study of myths has been abundantly shown of recent years, and the methods of analyzing them have been established with satisfactory clearness, but it has not yet even passed the stage where the distinction between myth and tradition has been recognized. Nearly all historians continue to write about some of the American Hero-Gods as if they had been chiefs of tribes at some undetermined epoch, and the effort to trace the migrations and affiliations of nations by similarities in such stories is of almost daily occurrence.

The time has long since passed, at least among thinking men, when the religious legends of the civilizations of the New World were looked upon as trivial fables, or as the inventions of the Father of Lies. They are neither the one nor the other. They express, in image and incident, the opinions of these civilizations on the mightiest topics of human thought, on the origin and destiny of man, his motives for duty and his grounds of hope, and the source, history and fate of all external nature.

The prejudice against all the so-called “lower faiths” inspired by the claim of Christianity to a monopoly of religious truth has led to extreme injustice toward the heathen religions. Little effort has been made to distinguish between their good and evil tendencies, or even to understand them.

214 pages

ISBN: 979-12-80130-03-7

Descrizione

American Hero-Myths by Daniel Garrison Brinton, published first time in 1892, is still today one of the most important contributions to the comparative study of religions and an endeavor to present in a critically correct light some of the fundamental conceptions which are found in the native beliefs of the tribes of America.

The importance of the study of myths has been abundantly shown of recent years, and the methods of analyzing them have been established with satisfactory clearness, but it has not yet even passed the stage where the distinction between myth and tradition has been recognized. Nearly all historians continue to write about some of the American Hero-Gods as if they had been chiefs of tribes at some undetermined epoch, and the effort to trace the migrations and affiliations of nations by similarities in such stories is of almost daily occurrence.

The time has long since passed, at least among thinking men, when the religious legends of the civilizations of the New World were looked upon as trivial fables, or as the inventions of the Father of Lies. They are neither the one nor the other. They express, in image and incident, the opinions of these civilizations on the mightiest topics of human thought, on the origin and destiny of man, his motives for duty and his grounds of hope, and the source, history and fate of all external nature.

The prejudice against all the so-called “lower faiths” inspired by the claim of Christianity to a monopoly of religious truth has led to extreme injustice toward the heathen religions. Little effort has been made to distinguish between their good and evil tendencies, or even to understand them.

214 pages

ISBN: 979-12-80130-03-7