James Cook University Subject Handbook - 2006

AN2008 - Myth and Ritual

Credit points: 03
Year: 2006
Student Contribution Band: Band 1
Administered by:

The subject introduces students to the world of myth and ritual: aspects of human culture that are vital to the construction of self and identity as well as to the nature of the imaginative engagement between people and their worlds. Myth and ritual are universal features of human thought and practice and as such they reveal critical insights into the nature of human beings. Through the careful analysis of myths and rituals from different cultural contexts, the subject explores vital and perennial topics of Anthropology, Philosophy and Religious Studies. The subject explores questions of why people create and articulate myths, of the importance of myths for the understanding of what it means to be human, and of the significance of common themes evident in myths from different cultural, geographical and historical contexts. The subject explores the importance of ritual as a special type of human individual and collective practice. To this end, the subject explores the aesthetics of ritualsymbolism, theatre, music, dance while exploring such phenomena as initiation, trance, sacrifice, spirit possession, shamanism and sorcery. The myth and ritual traditions the subject focuses upon will vary but generally include examples ranging from the traditional Native American to the European, Asian and Indigenous Australian.

Learning Outcomes

Inadmissible
Subject
Combinations:
AN3008 and SY2049 and SY3049

Availabilities

, , Study Period 2
Census Date 08-Sep-2006
Coordinator: Dr Michael Wood
Lecturer: Kevin Mayo.
Contact hours:
  • 26 hours
  • 12 hours
    Assessment: (30%); (20%); (50%).

    , , Study Period 2
    Census Date 08-Sep-2006
    Coord/Lect: jc164288.
    Contact hours:
    • 26 hours
    • 12 hours
      Assessment: (30%); (20%); (50%).

      Note: Minor variations might occur due to the continuous Subject quality improvement process, and in case of minor variation(s) in assessment details, the Subject Outline represents the latest official information.