Tuesday, December 3, 2013

My Final Project!


The Myths, Dreams and Mysteries of The Magus


Mircea Eliade’s Myths, Dreams, and Mysteries is an in depth analysis of how archaic myths and traditions are present in the modern world. He introduces the concept of the illo tempore, which becomes a theme throughout the book. This work of nonfiction as well as the fictional novel, The Magus, by John Fowels are both key components of the Mythological Displacement curriculum. By thoroughly investigating the ideas presented in each chapter of Myths, Dreams, and Mysteries and relating these ideas to The Magus, many parallels could be made, displaying how the two works possess each other, just as many literary works do.

Nostalgia for Paradise in the Primitive Traditions

The paradisiac myth is a common theme seen in cultures all over the world. These myths all include the idea of Heaven being close to Earth and there being an easy and direct connection between the two during the illo tempore. On page 65, Eliade states, “Now, we know that, in illo tempore, in the mythic time of Paradise, a Mountain, a Tree or a Pillar or a liana connected Earth with Heaven, so that primordial man could easily go up into Heaven by climbing it. Communication with Heaven in illo tempore was simple, and meeting with the gods took place in concreto.”
Bourani can be thought of as a pseudo illo tempore. It is a place where Nicholas goes to escape the rest of his life on Phraxos. The rest of his troubles appear seemingly unimportant when he is at Bourani and he longs for the weekends he spends there, which are usually comprised of good food and good company. There are also many mystical aspects about Bourani that suggest it being an illo tempore. During one of Nicholas’s first visits, he watches a display acted out in which a nymph is being chased by a satyr, both of which are being observed by Apollo. He also observes a jackal-headed guard at the villa. Conchis’s manner is mystical in itself in that so much mystery shrouds his true identity. In a way, when Nicholas spends time at Bourani, he is closer to “heaven”, or at least another realm.
Eliade also notes the paradisiac symbolism of churches and monastery gardens. Conchis’s home is also described as a very beautiful place, with an elaborate villa filled with exquisite artwork and a private beach. This is but another parallel between Bourani and the illo tempore. However, this analogy between Bourani and the illo tempore can only go so far. This is because Bourani is ALSO a pseudo demonic underworld in which Nicholas descends into and is faced with Conchis’s  “god game”.  

Sense-Experience and Mystical Experience among Primitives

Eliade’s chapter on sense-experience pays special attention to individuals which he calls “specialists in ecstasy”.  He describes them as, “The shamans, the medicine-men, magicians, healers, the ecstatic and the inspired of every description, are distinguished from the rest of the community by the intensity of their religious experience. They live the sacred side of life in a profounder and more personal manner than others. In most cases they attract attention by some unusual behavior, by the possession of occult powers, by having personal and secret relations with divine or demonic beings, by a style of life, or dress, by insignia and ways of speaking , which are theirs alone.” There are many similarities between the mannerisms of shamans in primitive societies described by Eliade and those of Conchis in The Magus. As was quoted from Eliade, Shamans are distinguished from the rest of the community. In The Magus, it seems as if everyone on the island of Phraxos has heard of Conchis, but nobody really knows the truth about him. He leads a life shrouded in mystery. It is also apparent that he is very wealthy and powerful, someone to be respected by his peers. His way of living is particularly unusual. He keeps strange company, such as the twins and the large, seemingly-mute black man. Referring to Shamans within primitive traditions, Eliade says, “They are the principal custodians of the rich oral literature: the poetic vocabulary of a Yakut shaman comprises some 12,000 words, whilst his ordinary speech – all that is known to the rest of the community – consists of only 4,000… singer, poet, musician, seer, priest and doctor, seems to be the guardian of the popular religious traditions, the custodian of legends several centuries old. The shamans exhibit powers of memory and of self-control well above the average.” In Nicholas’s time at Bourani, Conchis tells him many stories. Especially if these stories are fabricated, he must possess excellent memory and self-control. He also appears to be a jack of all trades, or at least that’s what he claims. He is a musician, a psychologist, a doctor, and a mayor. His skills at hypnosis must not also be forgotten, for that is an important mark of a shaman. 
Eliade states that one becomes a shaman by one of three methods. 1. By spontaneous vocation such as a “call” or “election”. 2. By hereditary transmission from the shaman profession. 3. By personal decision or the will of the clan. If Conchis is analogous to a Shaman, then perhaps Nicholas is a future shaman. This would give more apparent purpose to Nicholas’s initiation and the “god game”. It seems he was chosen for Conchis’s game “by spontaneous vocation” and also a little bit by “personal decision”. He did not choose to participate necessarily, but he did keep coming back to Bourani willingly.
Just like a shaman, a future shaman is marked by unusually strange behavior. Eliade states, “The future shaman marks himself off progressively by some strange behavior: he seeks solitude, becomes a dreamer, loves to wander in woods or desert places, has visions, sings in his sleep, ect. Sometimes this period of incubation is characterized by rather grave symptoms… such as throwing oneself into water or fire or wounding oneself with knives.” Nicholas is a fairly suitable match for this description. He is a melancholy person, especially during his time on Phraxos. He is depressed by the monotony of the island and frequently wanders the forest and the less populated side of the island. He also may have tendencies to harm himself, seeing as he was at one point seconds away from committing suicide.
A shaman’s initiation is by no means easy. “This mystical vocation often enough involves a profound crisis, sometimes touch the borderline of “madness”. And since one cannot become a shaman until one has resolved it, this crisis evidently plays the part of a mystic initiation… The ritual death, without which no initiation is possible, is passed through by the “patient” in the form of a descent into Hell.” Conchis sets up a situation in which Nicholas falls madly in love and it is all wrenched away from him. Not only is his lover taken away, but so is Alison, and his job. To put it frankly, Nicholas is put through hell and that is where the novel ends. Perhaps he transcends out of this hell as a shaman himself.

Symbolisms of Ascension

In this chapter, Eliade invites the reader to think of “flight” more symbolically, as a dizzy trajectory. He explains that flight could be encompassed by elements of anxiety, an effort to escape imminent danger, or an attempt to free oneself. This symbolism is more appropriate when relating the idea of “flight” to The Magus. It is obvious that Nicholas experiences a great deal of anxiety in the novel as a result of Conchis’s “godgame”. There are also moments when he literally attempts to free himself, like during the trial.
                Since Eliade closely relates the concepts of flight and freedom, it’s appropriate to point out the significance of “freedom” in The Magus. In Conchis’s story of the German invasion of Phraxos, he is haunted by the words of one of the guerrilla prisoners before his death. Conchis refers to the guerilla by saying, “He spoke out of a world the very opposite of mine. In mine life had no price. It was so valuable that it was literally priceless. In his, only one thing had that quality of pricelessness. It was eleutheria: freedom. He was the immalleable, the essence, the beyond reason, beyond logic, beyond civilization, beyond history… He was the final right to deny. To be free to choose. He, or what manifested itself through him, even included the insane Wimmel, the despicable German and Austrian troops. He was every freedom, from the very worst to the very best. The freedom to desert on the battlefield of Neuve Chapelle. The freedom to confront a primitive God at Seidevarre. The freedom to disembowel peasant girls and castrate with wire-cutters. He was something that passed beyond morality but sprang out of the very essence of things - that comprehended all, the freedom to do all, and stood against only one thing – the prohibition not to do all.” Just as Conchis is given the freedom to choose whether or not to beat the guerrilla to death, Nicholas is later given the freedom to choose to use the cat on Lily in revenge for her deception. At this moment, Nicholas recalls the following: The better you understand freedom, the less you possess it. Nicholas finds freedom, or flight, in choosing not to strike Lily with the cat. This is perhaps his form of moral “escape” from Conchis’s grasp.
                Eliade proposes yet another idea, that “flight” symbolizes intelligence and understanding. He quotes the Pancavimca Brahmana, which states, “he who understands has wings”. Throughout The Magus, Nicholas is constantly searching for answers and insight. Up to the final chapters of the novel, Nicholas attempts to research Conchis and his colleagues, in search of some understanding of their motives. Despite his efforts, he is left in the dark, flightless and confused.
No matter which symbolism of flight you consider, they all have one commonality. Eliade states, “they all express a break with the universe of everyday experience; and a dual purposiveness is evident in this rupture: both transcendence and, at the same time, freedom are to be obtained through the “flight”.” This symbol of flight can first be found in The Magus through Nicholas’s initial boredom with England and his affair with Alison. On page 48, as Nicholas leaves for the island of Phraxos, he reflects by saying, “The thing I felt most clearly, when the first corner was turned, was that I had escaped; and hardly less clearly, but much more odiously, that (Alison) loved me more than I loved her, and that consequently I had in some indefinable way won. So on top of the excitement of the voyage into the unknown, the taking wing again, I had an agreeable feeling of emotional triumph.” After spending some time on Phraxos, Nicholas seeks flight from the monotony of his life on the island. He grows to loathe his job and the people at the school. He seeks transcendence from his unhappiness first by writing poetry and contemplating suicide and second, by exploring the island. On page 62, Nicholas reflects on that time in his life and states, “To write poetry and to commit suicide, apparently so contradictory, had really been the same, attempts at escape.” When Nicholas comes across Bourani, he has, in a sense, found a break with the universe of everyday experience and experienced a “flight” from monotony. Nicholas’s longing for something new and different further proves him to be representative of the “everyday man”. Eliade states, “Such a desire to free himself from his limitations, which he feels to be a kind of degradation, and to regain spontaneity and freedom- the desire expressed, in the example here discussed, by symbols of the “flight” –must be ranked among the specific marks of man.” Therefore, Nicholas’s longing for something new and different are an inevitable part of the human condition.

Power and Holiness in the History of Religions

The relation between power and holiness and The Magus can first be seen in looking at the title of the novel. There is an unmistakable likeness between gods and magicians. In his book, Eliade likens the Vedic god Varuna to a Magician, stating, “Varuna is indeed a powerful god, a Great Magician, and men tremble before him.” Though the title The Magus is very telling of the nature of the novel, it was originally titled The Godgame. In Conchis’s “godgame”, Nicholas becomes a slave to a fate seemingly predetermined by Conchis. Conchis essentially becomes the ruler over Nicholas’s life. Conchis also possesses or seems to possess many attributes similar to those of a primitive god. Eliade describes the gods of primitive traditions by saying, “All the celestial gods of the “primitives” possess attributes and powers that denote intelligence, knowledge and “wisdom”. The celestial god sees everything and therefore knows everything, and this knowledge, being of a supernatural order, is in itself a force.” Conchis is certainly intelligent and well-spoken, but he also becomes an ever-watching eye over Nicholas’s life. He “sees” everything, as is apparent when it is revealed that Conchis is aware of Nicholas’s activities even away from Bourani, such as when he meets Alison in Athens.
A theory of the reason as to why Conchis only reads nonfiction comes from the bible verse Exodus 20:5. It says, “You must not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the fathers' sin, to the third and fourth generations of those who hate Me.” Perhaps in order for Conchis to become a “god”, Nicholas could not be influenced by any other myths or theologies, which is why Conchis only kept books of nonfiction at Bourani.

Mother Earth and the Cosmic Hierogamies

In this chapter, Eliade introduces one particularly interesting Zuni myth that recounts that in illo tempore, the “Twins of War” came down through a lake into the underground world. After their time underground, they returned to the surface, bringing back some subterranean men, and from them our present humanity had descended. However, the Twins did not operate alone. It was the Sun who, with the help of the Twins led mankind to the surface of the earth. This myth cannot just be used as a story for the beginning of times. For example, the Navajo recite such myths during ceremonies for the purpose of curing an illness or the initiation of a shaman-apprentice. This shows that they are applicable for periods of rebirth or as a rite of passage. Twins seem to have a mystical appeal. Perhaps because it is that they are a phenomenon, sharing the same genetic code. It is as if the same person can transcend one body and be in two places and two mindsets at once. This also may be why the twins Julie and June are presented in The Magus. Not only are they twins, but they stand out from society in many other aspects as well. They are identical, beautiful, very intelligent, and presumably excellent actresses as well. Conchis plays the role of the Sun in this myth. He guides the actions of The Twins so they become “middle-men” in this journey. If we are to assume that Nicholas’s experience is an initiation or rite of passage of sorts, than likening his experience to this myth of the beginning of time is not so outlandish.