Mythological Motifs in Narratives
The volume "Mythological Motifs in Narratives" brings together a wide-ranging collection of scholarly studies that engage with myth across multiple textual, oral, and visual traditions. Rather than treating myth as a static or unified system, the chapters in this collection explore the diverse and dynamic ways in which myth is formed, transmitted, and reinterpreted. The contributions reflect a sustained scholarly effort to uncover the processes through which myths are constructed, circulated, dismantled, and reassembled. Drawing from a wide field of disciplines, the volume offers a framework for understanding myth not through origin or essence, but through usage, adaptation, and transformation. This engagement with myth requires attention to both textual specificity and broader cultural processes. The studies in this volume investigate how myth functions as a narrative tool, a symbolic reservoir, and a site of ideological struggle. Contributors explore how myths adapt to changing historical and social conditions, how they are reshaped in response to new media and interpretive communities, and how they continue to inform aesthetic production and theoretical reflection. Through this approach, the volume presents myth not as inherited truth but as a set of discursive practices that remain active across languages and traditions.