The Survival of the Pagan Gods: The Mythological Tradition and Its Place in Renaissance Humanism and Art (Mythos: The Princeton/Bollingen Series in World Mythology)

by Jean Seznec

Other authorsBarbara Sessions (Translator)
Paperback, 1972

Status

Available

Call number

292.130902

Collection

Publication

Princeton University Press (1972), Edition: 1st, 392 pages

Description

The gods of Olympus died with the advent of Christianity--or so we have been taught to believe. But how are we to account for their tremendous popularity during the Renaissance? This illustrated book, now reprinted in a new, larger paperback format, offers the general reader first a discussion of mythology in late antiquity and the Middle Ages, and then a multifaceted look at the far-reaching role played by mythology in Renaissance intellectual and emotional life.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Poquette
While The Survival of the Pagan Gods is not a book for everyone, it is perhaps the most scholarly attempt we have available in English to explain the time line or progression of the role played by the ancient mythologies in the literature, art, philosophy and theology of the West from Plato up to
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the sixteenth century.

Originally written in French as La Survivance des Dieux Antiques in 1940, it was translated into English and published by the Bollingen Foundation in 1953. Author Jean Seznec was a world-renowned scholar who taught for many years at Harvard and later at Oxford.

The main point of the book is to say that while it is a commonplace that the Olympian gods died with the rise of Christianity, to be resurrected during the Renaissance, the fact is that they did not completely disappear but merely assumed different forms and identities, and that medieval writers used them allegorically to further their own theological positions. Then during the Renaissance, with the fresh availability of ancient sources, few writers and artists actually relied on primary sources but instead turned to reference manuals compiled largely from medieval sources to describe and list the attributes of the ancient deities. This in large part accounts for the sometimes bizarre inconsistencies that are found in descriptions and depictions of these gods. (See above, Bernini vis-à-vis the book cover illustration from a medieval manuscript.)

This is all a very specialized subject, and as an American whose familiarity with Latin and the living European languages is limited to vague recollections of high school exposure and also as someone who has no pretenses to scholarly erudition, I found this book to be somewhat annoying to read. And that annoyance, let me hasten to say, is a function of my own lack of fluency in languages other than English. The author Seznec has cited countless ancient medieval and Renaissance sources and quoted liberally from them. The quotations that were in Latin are thankfully translated in footnotes, but modern language quotations are not given the same treatment. The net effect is that the book, while otherwise fairly easy to follow, is a source of some frustration when one would like to know what the passages in French and Italian actually said.

Aside from this, I found the book to be quite elucidating in explaining the many anomalies we moderns face when trying to understand the symbolism in paintings and poetic references particularly. The book is liberally strewn with black and white illustrations from manuscripts, incunabula and later printed editions, and also of painting and sculpture. So throughout we have visual representations of what Seznec is discussing.

Despite the frustrations of a scholarly work for the nonscholarly reader, I do believe The Survival of the Pagan Gods is a foundational work which in the end will serve as a useful reference to come back to again and again.
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Language

Original language

French

Original publication date

1940

Physical description

392 p.; 7.9 inches

ISBN

0691017832 / 9780691017839

Local notes

MFT

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