Vote for Your Favorite Actor to Play the Role of Tiresias/Teresa in the Movie Version of the New Futurist Adventure Movie Spiritus Mundi!————George de Fresne, Dustin Hoffman, Robin Williams, Tim Curry, Boy George, Miku-An Cafe, Nong Toom, Cillian Murphy, Ranjit Chowdhry, Prince, Tom Hanks !!!

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Related Links and Websites: Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard

For Introduction and Overview of the Novel and Movie: https://spiritusmundinovel.wordpress.com/

For Author’s Blog: https://robertalexandersheppard.wordpress.com/

To Read a Sample Chapter from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundisamplechapters.wordpress.com/

To Read Fantasy, Myth and Magical Realism Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundifantasymythandmagicalrealism.wordpress.com/

To Read Sexual Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: The Varieties of Sexul Experience: https://spiritusmundivarietiesofsexualexperience.wordpress.com/

To Read Spy, Espionage and Counter-terrorism Thriller Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: http://spiritusmundispyespionagecounterterrorism.wordpress.com/

To Read Geopolitical and World War Three Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi:https://spiritusmundigeopoliticalworldwar3.wordpress.com/

To Read Spiritual and Religious Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundionspiritualityandreligion.wordpress.com/

To Read about the Global Campaign for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly in Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundiunitednationsparliamentaryassembly.wordpress.com/

To Read Poetry from Spiritus Mundihttps://spiritusmundipoetry.wordpress.com/

For Discussions on World Literature and Literary Criticism in Spiritus Mundi: http://worldliteratureandliterarycriticism.wordpress.com/

For Discussions of World History and World Civilization in Spiritus Mundi: https://worldhistoryandcivilizationspiritusmundi.wordpress.com/

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THE INDIAN CLASSICS—THE MAHABHARATA, BHAGAVAD GITA & RAMAYANA CYCLE—FROM THE WORLD LITERATURE FORUM RECOMMENDED CLASSICS AND MASTERPIECES SERIES VIA GOODREADS—-ROBERT SHEPPARD, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

MahabharataMahabharata by William Buck
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

THE INDIAN CLASSICS—THE MAHABHARATA,BHAGAVAD GITA & RAMAYANA CYCLE—FROM THE WORLD LITERATURE FORUM RECOMMENDED CLASSICS AND MASTERPIECES SERIES VIA GOODREADS—-ROBERT SHEPPARD, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

“Man is a slave to power…” says the Mahabharata,”…but power is a slave to no one.” The puzzle of power in its acquisition, intrinsic contradictions, disillusionments and disappointments, transience, arbitrariness, loss and questionable legitimacy is one of the principal themes of this monumental epic, and its ultimate pessimism and absence of any viable solution to that puzzle makes this touchstone classic of World Literature as modern as it is ancient.

The Mahabarata, or “Great Battle of the Men of Bharata” is an epic war story of equal stature with the “Iliad” of Homer, and like the Iliad and Odyssey, is not only a classic of Sanskrit and Indian literature, but similar to them has become constituative in the shaping and defining its own culture and civilization. Thus no educated person in the world today who wishes to understand the living world around him or her can remain ignorant of at least the broad outlines not only of the Mahabharata, but its included and related component works, the Bhagavad Gita and Ramayana, which together consciously or unconsciously move and animate the understanding and motivations not only of the of the billion and one-half people of the Indian subcontinent, one fifth of all humanity, but also across the extended sphere of Indian cultural influence over five millennia, from Indonesia to Persia, to Japan and China through Buddhism and abroad in the wider world.

How can we then approach the Mahabharata? One initial problem is its gargantuan size and bagginess. It is ten times the legnth of the Iliad and Odyssey combined, and its shape, reflecting its origin of evolution from a cloud of orally transmitted sagas to transformation into a coherent literary work is understandably intimidating for many. For those of us coming from the Western tradition a thumbnail analogy describing the Mahbharata might be to imagine gathered into one book the Iliad, the Odyssey, Hesiod’s Theogony, an anthology of selected works and dialogues of Plato, Socrates, the Pre-Socratics, Aristotle, Plotinus and a grabbag of “Popular Books & Passages from the Bible.” The Mahabharata, even more than the Homeric epics aspires to offer not just a story, but a total account of a culture, announcing in its opening: “Whatever is found here may well be found elsewhere; what is not here is nowhere.”

The Bhagavad Gita, (Song of the Blessed One) often read as a separate work but in reality but one section of the Mahabharata is included in this sprawling mass, and presents the philosophical dilemma of the warrior Arjuna on the eve of the horrific war, contemplating the moral and spiritual question of whether participation in the savagery, horror and waste of war can ever be morally justified or spiritually condoned, and the answer of Krishna that one must do one’s duty (dharma) even if violent and wasteful, and acheive a spiritual state of detachment in so doing. A shortened version of the third great classic, the Ramayana, presenting the story of the abduction of Sita, virtuous wife of Rama at the hands of the evil Ravana, and her rescue by Rama with the aid of Hanuman, the magically gifted Monkey-King, a tale known not only to every child in India but also echoed across China, Japan and East Asia in the incarnation of Hanuman as Sun Wu Kong the Chinese Monkey-King, is also part of the sprawling whole.

Though I have read the complete Bhagavad Gita and Ramayana, I have to confess that while I have read the great bulk of the Mahabharata, I have never completed reading it from page one to its end, a feat perhaps as comparable and as little accomplished as reading the complete Bible from page one and Genesis to the last page of Revelations and the Apocrypha, another feat I have fallen short of. Nonethelsss even falling short of total completion in either case is well worth the effort.

The core of the Mahabharata, like the Iliad, is a saga of a great war from its origins to its all-consuming escalations, to its horrific end and consequences, and like the Iliad, it constitutes a great story. The saga begins in “The City of the Elephant,” Hastinapura with a conflict of princely succession to the throne between two branches of the royal family, the Kurus, being the Kauravas and the Pandavas. I will not attempt to give all the details which are too convoluted for such an introduction such as this, but relate some of the more striking salient points.

The Pandavas are five brothers, sons of one main scion of the royal lineage, Pandu. Pandu has two wives, Kunti and Madri, but is stricken by a curse that should he ever have sex he would be stricken dead! He rules briefly then retires to the forest wilderness with his wives, Buddha-like, for spiritual reasons. His wives, not to be undone by the curse, nevertheless succeed in producing children, who are fathered not by Pandu but by various gods, Dharma god of Law, the Wind god, Indra, and the Ashwins–Divine Horsemen. These five Pandava Brothers grow up in the wilderness until the death of Pandu their father, upon which the drama of conflict and war begins when they return to the kingdom, in the interim dominated by the other branch of the royal family the Kauravas, to claim their patrimony, power and right to rule.

As if the conception and birth of the Pandava Brothers were not perplexing enough the tale of their marriage en route to their ancestral home kingdom is even more bizarre and mythically charged. Whilst they were in hiding the Pandavas learn of a competition which is taking place for the hand of the Pāñcāla princess Draupadī. The Pandavas enter the competition in disguise as Brahmins. The task, Odysseus-like, is to string a mighty steel bow and shoot a target on the ceiling, which is the eye of a moving artificial fish, while looking at its reflection in a pool of oil below. Most of the princes fail, many being even unable to lift the bow. One of the Pandava Brothers, Arjuna, succeeds however. The Pandavas return to inform their mother that Arjuna has won a competition and to look at what they have brought as grand prize. Without looking, Kunti asks them to share whatever it is Arjuna has won among themselves equally. On explaining the previous life of Draupadi, she ends up being shared as the common wife of all five brothers!

Needless to say, the rival Kauravas are little pleased by the reappearance and claims to rule of the five Pandava brothers and their wife-in common, Draupati. They first attempt to asassinate them by sealing them in a wooden palace, the House of Lac, and setting it afire, a plot foiled by a divine tip-off that allows them to dig an escape tunnel. The stakes are then upped when the Kauravas plot to invite one of the brothers,Yudhishtira, to play “A Friendly Dice Game” albeit with loaded dice. Yudhishtira first loses all his wealth, then the Kingdom. Fatally addicted to the passion of gambling and desperately hoping for a comeback, he then even gambles away as ultimate stakes his brothers, himself, and finally his wife, condemning all by his loss into servitude and slavery.

The jubilant Kauravas insult the Pandavas whom they now own as chattel slaves in their helpless state and even try to strip naked Princess Draupadi in front of the entire court as a common house slave, but her honour is saved by Krishna who miraculously creates lengths of cloth to replace the ones being removed. The royal elders, are aghast at the situation, but Duryodhana, leader of the Kauravas is adamant that there is no place for two crown princes in Hastinapura. Against his wishes the elders order another dice game, ending in a stalemated compromise. The Pandavas are required to go into exile for 12 years, and in the 13th year must remain hidden. If discovered by the Kauravas, they will be forced into exile for another 12 years.

The Pandavas spend their thirteen years in exile; many adventures occur during this time. They also prepare alliances for a possible future conflict. They spend their final year in disguise in the court of Virata, and are discovered just after the end of the stipulated year. At the end of their exile, they try to negotiate a return. However, this fails, as Duryodhana objects that they were discovered while in hiding, and that no return of their kingdom was agreed. Both sides accuse the other of cheating on the agreement and distorting it and the law in bad faith. War becomes inevitable.

From there, like the Iliad, the core story is an account of the protracted, bloody and ultimately hopeless internecine war. Both sides recruit allies and warriors, and as in the Iliad the gods look on, with Krishna, like Athena in the Iliad, favoring but not directly fighting for one side, the Pandavas, serving as Arjuna’s chariot driver. On the eve of the culminating battle of Kurukshetra, however, Arjuna begins to have moral and spiritual qualms about killing not only his kindred but thousands of innocents in their quest for power, and considers deserting or conceding the conflict and withdrawing into spiritual exile.

It is this section that constitutes the Bhagavad Gita, centered on the god Krishna’s answers to Arjuna’s pacifist sentiments. He counsels rejection of the “Tolstoyan” pacifist sentiments Arjuna has allowed to gain influence over him and urges upon Arjuna the primacy first of duty, Dharma, and secondly a need to cultivate spiritual detachment in fulfilling one’s fate. Arjuna accedes to his counsel, though he clearly sees that this war will have no winners, only losers. regardless of outcome.

The battle rages for eighteen days, and though at the beginning all pretend to chivalrous ideals of genteel and honourable battle, by the end both sides have resorted to dastardly, dirty and dishonourable tricks and tactics. By the end, everyone’s fates are sealed, and even those who are fated to be victors, the more they hold onto their victory, the more they realize they have also lost everything they might have hoped for. “We now live,” they say even in their triumph, “dead in life.” The black Ragnarokian or Hamlet-like ending is that of a universal bloodbath and Armageddon, with only the Pandava brothers, Krishna and a handful or individuals barely surviving. As in Shakespeare’s melancholy ending, “the rest is silence.”

After the carnage, Ghandari, mother of the ninety-nine Kaurava brothers, all slain, curses the god Krishna, despising that as a god he had the power to stop the war but failed to do so. Krishna accepts the admonishment. The Pandavas rule, but their victory is a feast of shells, and in the end they abandon everything to go back to the wilderness and live in skins, then undertake a pilgrimage into the Himylayan mountains, which becomes an allegorical journey. They are joined by a stray dog, Mephistoopholes-like, who proves to be Yama, god of the Underworld. One by one they perish in falls on the steep slope of the ascent, Yama revealing this as allegorical justice for their sins and shortcomings. Only one Pandava brother,Yudhisthira, who has been found the sole virtuous protagonist in the whole saga and the dog remain. On topping the Himalayas, Yama then takes the virtuous Yudhisthira on a sojourn to the Underworld, Odysseus or Dante-like, observing his brothers and wife there, before escorting him to Heaven. Yama in the end, Dante-like, reveals to Yudhisthira that the fate of his brothers and wife is only temporary, their sojourn in the Underworld being more akin to Purgatory than Hell, and that after they have atoned for their sins and shortcomings they will ultimately join him in Heaven, it having been necessary for even the virtuous Yudhisthira to visit the Underworld, because all kingly personages must witness the Underworld at least once before becoming true Kings in Heaven.

The Ramayana appears in an abbreviated form in the Mahabharata, later to be reformulated as a classic Sanskrit masterpiece by the poet Valmiki. The oral origins of the Ramayana tale are underscored by Valmiki in the epic in the passage where the virtuous wife Sita insists that she must accompany her husband Rama in his exile in the wilderness, from which she will be eventually abducted by the arch-evil villain Ravana. Rama insists that she should stay safe behind in the holy city of Ayodhya. The impasse is broken when Sita metatextually cries out: “Thousands of Ramayanas have been composed before this one, and there isn’t one in which Sita doesn’t go with her husband!” Rama thus gives in before this narratological destiny. Just as Sophocles, Aeschylus and Euripides took over immorial sagas of heroes and the gods in composing their Greek tragedies, so Valmiki used pre-existing lore to craft his superb artistic masterpiece, far more refined and elaborated than the cursory account of the tale in the Mahabharata. The Ramayana of Valmiki, in addition to being a surpassing artistic reformulation of the prior treatment, also is an attempt at an ethical answer to the nihilistic and doom-laden worldview of the Mahabharata.

The narrative conflict of the Ramayana begins like that of the Mahabharata with a potential clash over succession to royal power when the aged King Dasharaatha, Lear-like, decides to abdicate the throne, leaving the two sons, Rama and Bharata in potential contention over the succession. But no conflict occurs as both brothers prove equally willing to defer to the other, as if neither really wanted the throne.

Instead, the conflict is deflected and re-directed outside the social heirarchy when the demon-king Ravana lusts for and abducts the beautiful and virtuous wife of Rama, Sita. Ravana is seemingly invincible, as he has been granted a divine wish by the great god Shiva. He uses this wish in a way that he believes will insure his immortality: he asks to be invincible and invulnerable to gods, demons, men and animals, and is granted his wish. However, Achilles-like, Fate has left one chink of vulnerabiity in his armor. Rama like Achilles and Hercules has been born half divine and half human, and does not fit into any of the stipulated terms and categories from which Shiva has made Ravana invulnerable. Thus, Rama as a “liminal” being between the divine and human slips through this contractual loophole to deal him a fatal blow, with the aid of the magically gifted Monkey-King Hanuman who helps him in his epic far-flung campaign to recover Sita from imprisonment on the island of Ceylon.

In the course of this campaign Rama, like Arjuna has moral qualms about the morality of the slaughter needed to oppose Ravana. Can any reasonable definition of dharma—law, right, duty—require the slaughter of one’s people and innocents in war? Tolstoy, Ghandi and many pacifists would answer in the negative. Krishna had answered in the affirmative citing soldierly duty and detachment even in yielding to a horrific fate. Rama, however comes to invoke a higher law, somewhat Confucian, in heirarchial obedience—son to father, younger brother to older brother, wife to husband, lower to higher caste. This heirarchical imperative, already stressed in the edicts of the Indian emperor Ashoka, serves to preserve peace amoung contestants for power. Anyone outside or threatening this chain of heirarchy, such as Ravana, has ceased to be human, and becomes a barbaric demon who with justice can be destroyed.

Thus even today, the Ramayana provides a moral role model for ordinary people in India, with young girls striving to be like Sita, and following a common proverb stating: “Act always like Rama, and never like Ravana.” The Ramayana thus has a moral authority comparable to Biblical parables, quite unlike the Mahabharata, regarded as a “dark book” and nihilisticly dangerous.

Of the authors of the two works, Valmiki is considered a progenitor of Sanskrit and Indian poetry and a revered figure. The Mahabharata itself declares itself to be authored by Vyasa, who is also a character in the story. Its writing is uniquely and picturesquely recounted in its pages, as Vyasa asks the elephant-god Ganesh to write down the epic from his dictation. Ganesh agrees, on the condition that Vyasa recite it without stopping, which Vyasa furthers counter-conditions to do, with proviso that he may stop long enough to confirm that Ganesh can understand what he hears.

The motifs of the Ramayana of Valmiki had some influence on the composition of my own contempory epic, Spiritus Mundi(Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard.) In Book II, Spiritus Mundi, The Romance, the more mythic of the two books, the heroes, led by Sartorius and his pregnant wife Eva, must enter a Portal in the Temple of the Mothers, Verne-like located at the center of the Central Sea of “Middle Earth,” a realm at the Center of the World, from which portal they can transit a “Cosmic Wormhole” through Space-Time and arrive at the Black Hole at the Center of the Milky Way Galaxy, where is convened a Council of the Immortals whose aid they need to save the human race from annihilation in a threatened nuclear World War Three.

Access to the Portal is, however, subject to a fatal restriction: no man or woman may open the portal and once closed behind them no one may return. The heroes, however must bring back the Sylmaril Crystal for use in the Crystal Bead Game which will determine human destiny. The liminal loophole through which the dilemma is resolved is similar to the hidden vulnerability of Ravana. Eva, who is pregnant with an unborn son, is both a woman and a man, both a female and the manchild within. In that liminal status, being something greater than either a separate man or a woman, she can open the gates of the portal and keep them open until the heroes return—that is in her pregnant state she is not a man or a woman but a transcendent hybrid fusion of both and as such an exception to the “either/or” rule. This universal Archetype of Liminality is found in both works and many other works of World Literature.

For a fuller discussion of the concept of World Literature you are invited to look into the extended discussion in the new book Spiritus Mundi, by Robert Sheppard, one of the principal themes of which is the emergence and evolution of World Literature:

For Discussions on World Literature and Literary Criticism in Spiritus Mundi: http://worldliteratureandliterarycrit

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17

Robert Sheppard

Editor-in-Chief
World Literature Forum
http://robertalexandersheppard.wordpr
Author, Spiritus Mundi Novel
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17
Spiritus Mundi, Book I: The Novel: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CIGJFGO
Spiritus Mundi, Book II: The Romance http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CGM8BZG

Copyright Robert Sheppard 2013 All Rights Reserved

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Vote For Your Choice of Actress to Play the Role of Khlorindah Sofroniah Darwah, Rai Chaba Diva in the Movie Version of the New Futurist Adventure Novel, Spiritus Mundi, by Robert Sheppard !!!——————–Shakira, Kareena Kapoor, Ishtar Alabina, Waafa Kilani, Aamna Sharif, Adelle Boustani, Afef Jnifen, Amar, Arwa, Annabelle Hilal, Dana Halabi, Dia Mirza, Heyfah Wehbeh, Katrina Kaif, Maya Diab, Nawal al Zoghbi, Nivine Nasr, Shada Hassoun, Sofia Essaidi, Yasmine Hamdan, Danya Yousef, Rima Fakih !!!

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Vote for Your Favorite Actor to Play the Role of Pari Kasiwar in the Movie Version of the New Futurist Adventure Novel Spiritus Mundi by Robert Sheppard!———————–Abhishek Bachchan,Sunil Shetty,Govinda, Arjun Rampal, Hrithik Roshan, Akshay Kumar, Saif Ali Kahn, Aamir Kahn, Shah Rukh Khan !!!

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Related Links and Websites: Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard

For Introduction and Overview of the Novel and Movie: https://spiritusmundinovel.wordpress.com/

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To Read a Sample Chapter from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundisamplechapters.wordpress.com/

To Read Fantasy, Myth and Magical Realism Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundifantasymythandmagicalrealism.wordpress.com/

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To Read about the Global Campaign for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly in Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundiunitednationsparliamentaryassembly.wordpress.com/

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Vote for Your Favorite Actor to Play the Role of Mohammad ala Rushdie in the Movie Version of the New Futurist Adventure Novel Spiritus Mundi!————–Ahmad al Fishawi, Ahmad Ezz, Aamir Kahn, Ahmad el Sakka, Akshay Kahnna, Saif Ali Kahn, Hrithk Roshan, Khaled Abol Naga !!!

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Related Links and Websites: Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard

For Introduction and Overview of the Novel and Movie: https://spiritusmundinovel.wordpress.com/

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To Read a Sample Chapter from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundisamplechapters.wordpress.com/

To Read Fantasy, Myth and Magical Realism Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundifantasymythandmagicalrealism.wordpress.com/

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Vote for Your Favorite Actress to Play the Role of Yoriko Oe in the Movie Version of the New Futurist Adventure Novel Spiritus Mundi!————–Zhang Ziyi, Gong Li, Tang Wei, Keiko Kitagawa, Shu Qi, Li Yuchun, Kim Seon Ah, Masami Nagasawa and Lucy Liu !!!

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Related Links and Websites: Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard

For Introduction and Overview of the Novel and Movie: https://spiritusmundinovel.wordpress.com/

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To Read a Sample Chapter from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundisamplechapters.wordpress.com/

To Read Fantasy, Myth and Magical Realism Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundifantasymythandmagicalrealism.wordpress.com/

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Vote for Your Choice of Actress to Play Zhou Yuchun in the New Movie Version of the Futurist Adventure Novel Spiritus Mundi!—————-Gong Li, Michelle Yeoh, Tang Wei, Li Yuchun, Shu Qi, Zhang Ziyi !!!

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Related Links and Websites: Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard

For Introduction and Overview of the Novel and Movie: https://spiritusmundinovel.wordpress.com/

For Author’s Blog: https://robertalexandersheppard.wordpress.com/

To Read a Sample Chapter from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundisamplechapters.wordpress.com/

To Read Fantasy, Myth and Magical Realism Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundifantasymythandmagicalrealism.wordpress.com/

To Read Sexual Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: The Varieties of Sexul Experience: https://spiritusmundivarietiesofsexualexperience.wordpress.com/

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THE EPIC OF GILGAMESH—-THE FIRST TRUE WORK OF WORLD LITERATURE—FROM THE WORLD LITERATURE FORUM RECOMMENDED CLASSICS AND MASTERPIECES SERIES VIA GOODREADS—-ROBERT SHEPPARD, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Gilgamesh: A New English VersionGilgamesh: A New English Version by Anonymous
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

THE EPIC OF GILGAMESH—-THE FIRST TRUE WORK OF WORLD LITERATURE—FROM THE WORLD LITERATURE FORUM RECOMMENDED CLASSICS AND MASTERPIECES SERIES VIA GOODREADS—-ROBERT SHEPPARD, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

The Epic of Gilgamesh may be rightly considered the first true work of World Literature, being the greatest literary composition of ancient Mesopotamia and likely predating in its origins such works as Genesis of the Bible’s Old Testament, the Iliad and Odyssey and the Vedas by more than a thousand years. It is the likely source of such archetypal stories as The Flood, later transcribed into Genesis of the Bible, Torah and Koran. It is also the earliest model of the Epic Tradition, establishing such archetypal motifs as The Descent into the Underworld, The Hero’s Quest, Contention with the Gods and the Quest for Immortality later to be found in Homer’s Odyssey, The Aeneid and Dante’s Divine Comedy. There are even hints in the epic of the origin of the Biblical story of the Creation and Fall of Adam & Eve.

Gilgamesh, the hero of the epic, is likely based on an actual historical king-high priest from the city-state of Uruk around 2750 B.C., whose saga was preserved, embellished, mythologized and elaborated over 1500 years until settled into its classical form by the Babylonian writer Sin-liqe-unninni around 1200 B.C. The epic vanished from human knowledge for two thousnd years, however, until recovered by archaelogists and linguists, like the heiroglyphic texts unlocked by the Rosetta Stone, in the 1850’s.

Gilgamesh, like other classical heroes presents himself as a mixed figure, like Achilles and Hercules in being of mixed divine and human parentage, and like Achilles though of heroic heart, having serious flaws of character. The Epic begins with Gilgamesh the king oppressing his own people through such practices as exercising the “right of the first night” to deflower new brides, causing the people to appeal to the Gods for help. The Gods consider a solution and come up with a unique remedy: they will create a brotherly rival of similar superhuman energy and strength, Enkidu, to divert and channel Gilgamesh’s overweening energies in a more positive direction. Gilgamesh and Enkidu thus become a cross between the Odd Couple and the Dynamic Duo—-Gilgamesh a noble, over-civilized and refined king, and Enkidu, like Adam created out of the clay of the ground, rough, hairy, crude, uncivilized and animal-like.

Gilgamesh, learning of Enkidu’s discovery in the wilderness as a sort os Sasquatch, schemes to bring him to civilization by means of sending a beautiful prostitute, Shamat, to seduce him. She succeeds in taming him with sexual pleasure, then reels in the hooked fish to join civilization, accustoming him to clothes, language and human intercourse. Some scholars note the similarity of the Enkidu/Shamat story with Adam & Eve, in which a seduction of a primal man causes sin, death and a fall from natural and divine grace into the mortal world. When Enkidu, however, learns of Gilgamesh’s abuses, such as deflowing brides on their wedding night, his natural outrage overcomes him and he vows to teach Gilgamesh a lesson. They fight, and being evenly matched yet complementary, instead of enemies they become fast friends.

From that point the two become like Arthurian knight-heroes and sworn brothers like the Musketeers, vowing to do great deeds and gain immortal fame. They defeat the great monster of the Cedar Mountain, Humbaba, and plunder the cedar forest for materials to embellish the Palace of Uruk. They then run afoul of the Goddess Ishtar, goddess of love and fertility, when Gilgamesh refuses to become her lover due to her record of abuse of her ex-beaus, and she asks the Gods to give her the Bull of Heaven to wreak havoc and punish the king and his city. The Gods refuse at first, but when she threatens to “Raise the Dead to Devour the Living,” a kind of threatened “World War Z,” they grant her the Bull and she sicks it on Gilgamesh and Uruk. The Dynamic Duo, however, are able to defeat even the awesome Bull of Heaven and they dismember it, flinging one quarter of its carcass, half of the hind-quarters with its testacles attached into Ishtar’s face, outraging her.

The heroes reach the height of their fame and glory, but their excesses against the Goddess Ishtar constitute a hubris which the Gods cannot further tolerate, and they decree that one of the pair must die, namely Enkidu. In delirious dream after falling ill he descends to the Underworld of hell and is finally carried off by the Angel of Death.

Thereafter, the epic changes shape and focus as grief-stricken at the discovery of Death and the loss of his beloved friend, Gilgamesh wanders the wastes of the wilderness from which Enkido emerged until resolving, like Siddhartha-Buddha upon the realization of death and suffering, to embark on a Quest for Immortality, seeking out Utanapishtim, the Ur-Noah who is the one man who has acheived immortality by surviving the Great Flood, Noah-like, when the Gods warned him to build an Ark for his family and all the animals of the earth. To find Utanapishtim he must, Odysseus-like voyage on endless seas, in this case the Sea of Death. En route, he encounters the Scorpion-Man, Sphynx-like guardian of the great tunnel whom he defeats, allowing him to transit the “The Road of the Sun,” which is the trans-cosmic path through the center of the earth the sun takes to return to the East from the sunset of the West to begin each day anew. From there he completes his journey to Utanapishtim across the Sea of Death by aid of the Divine Ferryman Urshanabi, who Charon-like bears him to the Elysian-Eden on the snether-hores of Death at which the one immortal lives with his also immortal wife.

His Quest for Immortality is disappointed, however, as Utanapishtim demonstrates to him that his own immortality was a one-off act of grace of the Gods which can never be repeated by any other and urging him to return to his home at Uruk. His wife, however, taking pity on Gilgamesh lets him in on a secret—the existence of a charmed plant at the bottom of the sea that can rejuvenate—make the old young again and urges him to seek it. Gilgamesh does so by tying stones to his feet and descending to the floor of the sea in transit home and recovers the boxthorn plant. Now overjoyed that his Quest is successful and that he will return to Uruk with this great boon, he relaxes to wash himself in a lake but in a moment of negligence while bathing, lets the divine charm out of his sight. It is then stolen by a serpent and he is doomed to return to humanity utterly defeated and empty-handed from his Quest.

His tragic Quest is not entirely fruitless, however, as he returns with new strength and wisdom, attaining a grace of mind and acceptance of both death and a reality beyond his control that yields wisdom. His only consolation is to return to his city and survey the immense walls and palaces he has built and find in them and in the epic saga he will leave behind after death, a kind of immortality through civilization and human understanding which he was unable to attain on the cosmic plain. Thus the Epic comes full cycle from a mythic Dream-Quest after human immortality, through heroic exaltation, and then in completion of the Myth-Odyssey, back to a renewal of the mundane through enhanced awareness and acceptance of the cosmic order and its limitations for civilized mortal man.

Nevertheless, immensely important epic of World Literature was lost to the “immortality of letters and civilization” for over two-thousand years until archaeologists recovered the clay tablets of Mesopotamia and scholars in the British Museum reconstructed both the language and the texts. George Smith, the British scholar who first diciphered the “Flood Story” which was the source of the Noah account in Genesis, dramatically and bizarrely, after he realized what he had just translated made him the first human being in two-thousand years to read the source of the Genesis story, was moved, to the astonishment of his fellows to strip himself stark naked and exult at the top of his lungs from atop a worktable in the midst of the musty artifacts room of the London Museum!

What then are the lessons about World Literature which the Epic of Gilgamesh, nearly five-thousand years from its historical and literary origins has to convey to us?

First, that though we may first think of World Literature as being a modern phenomenon accompanying Globalization, the Cross-Border e-Book and the Internet, in fact World Literature is immensely old, rooted in such works as the Epic of Gilgamesh, the common root of such stories as the Flood accounts of the Bible, Torah and Koran and an archetype of literature for five-thousand years—-a thousand years before the Greeks or Hebrews learned to write. Indeed, the concept of World Literature may be said to be much older and immemorial than even that as it embraces archetypes and motifs that predate the invention of human writing and are universal to all cultures, literate and illeterate, dating back to oral traditions and stories—“World Orature” if you will, such as the the Iliad and Odyssey which were passed on by bards orally for centuries before being written down, and that are in turn rooted in the primordial Collective Unconscious illuminated by C.G. Jung, Joseph Campbell, Freud, Frazer and others.

In the catchphase of modern vernacular, World Literature must embrace both it “Roots and Shoots,” that is to say both its most contemporary international sproutings—the works say of such “contemporary” international authors as Rohinton Mistry, Bei Dao or M.G. Vassanji, but must recoup the immortal classics and the evolution of the global canon that wield continuing influence globally and across borders such as Gilgamesh, the Bible, Cervantes, Goethe, the Koran, Rumi, Lao Zi, Tolstoy, Shakespeare, Joyce, T.S Eliot, Swift and the 1001 Nights, the common “Roots” of our common global culture and civilization. A journal of World Literature such as World Literature Today, were it to include only the former but ignore the latter and the long and continouous evolution of canon of classics and masterpieces of World Literature, or marginalize the cosmopolitain centers and touchstones of global tradition to fetishize only the recent works on the geographical margins, would prove itself grossly inadequate as a forum and catalyst of World Literature’s onward development. Both “roots” and “shoots” need to be comprehended if the living plant is to thrive.

Second, the Epic’s powerful archetypes of The Flood, The Rough and the Smooth Doubles (Gilgamesh & Enkidu, Jacob & Esau, etc., The Knightly Quest and Monster Slaying, the Hero’s Quest for the Boon of Immortality, the Great Mother, typified by Gilgamesh’s mother Ninsun whose benign assistance and wisdom assists him on his Quest, the Descent into the Underword and many others, all are emblematic of the Universal Archetypes that inform and unite World Literature, whether through historical influence or through their independent emergence in unrelated cultures informed by a common Collective Unconscious of humanity. Such works as Joseph Campbell’s Hero With a Thousand Faces illustrate how patterns such as the Hero’s Quest, involving a journey into a dangerous Netherworld in search of a Great Boon, overcoming a field of obstacles, and the hero’s Return to the realm of common life recur in all cultures and literatures.

Third, the Epics great themes of the fragility of human life and of human culture and civilization, of the loss of innocence and illusion and of the need for wisdom and transcendence in the light of human mortality and the limitations of reality on our dreams and aspirations, all bear witness to the experience of our common humanity accross cultures and millennia, and how World Literature may contribute to such transcendence: “Ars longa, vita brevis.”

Thus, I deeply recommends all citizens of the Global Republic of Letters read and commune with the Epic of Gilgamesh. In addition, I can testify how the archetypes and mofits of Gilgamesh informed the composition of my own recent work, the comtemporary epic Spiritus Mundi. The work is energized by the dynammic of The Quest, first in the mundane world of Book I involving the Campaign for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly for the evolution of Global Democracy,undertaken by the protagonists, and the later more mythical Book II, informed by the Quest for the Silmaril Crystal which takes Sartorius, Eva and the family of idealists from multiple cultures to “Middle Earth”–the Central Sea at the center of the earth, the Island of Omphalos and the Mothers and then through the Cosmic Wormhole to the Amphitheater of the Immortals at the Black Hole at the Center of the Milky Way Galaxy. This recapitulates Gilgammesh’s Epic Journey through the cosmic tunnel of the “Road of the Sun,” the path the Sun was held to take at night through the tunnel beneath the earth from the West back to the East each day to enable the new dawn. Like the “Wormhole” through Einsteinian Space-Time of Spiritus Mundi, Gilgamesh’s path through which he must outrace the sun to avoid destruction takes him out of the known dimensions of his material world into a space-time beyond his world’s knowledge and experience, all in Quest of a Great Boon. In the case of Spiritus Mundi such “Great Boon” consists in the saving of humanity from the Armageddon of World War III by obtaining the Silmaril Crystal and resolving the Glass Crystal Game which parallels human history on Earth, presided over by the Magister Ludi, reinvigorating the tradition of Hesse’s immortal spiritual classic, “Glassperlenspiel” or the Glass Bead Game.

For a fuller discussion of the concept of World Literature you are invited to look into the extended discussion in the new book Spiritus Mundi, by Robert Sheppard, one of the principal themes of which is the emergence of World Literature:

For Discussions on World Literature and Literary Criticism in Spiritus Mundi: http://worldliteratureandliterarycrit

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17

Robert Sheppard

Editor-in-Chief
World Literature Forum
http://robertalexandersheppard.wordpr
Author, Spiritus Mundi Novel
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17
Spiritus Mundi, Book I: The Novel: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CIGJFGO
Spiritus Mundi, Book II: The Romance http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CGM8BZG

Copyright Robert Sheppard 2013 All Rights Reserved

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Vote for Your Favorite Actor to Play Time-Travelling Terrorist Villain Caesarion Khannis in the Movie Version of the New Futurist Adventure Novel Spiritus Mundi!——————-Anthony Hopkins, Ted Levine, Gary Oldman, Kevin Spacey, Saif Ali Kahn, Akshay Kumar, Aamir Kahn, Akshay Kahnna, Abhishek Bachchan !!!

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Related Links and Websites: Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard

For Introduction and Overview of the Novel and Movie: https://spiritusmundinovel.wordpress.com/

For Author’s Blog: https://robertalexandersheppard.wordpress.com/

To Read a Sample Chapter from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundisamplechapters.wordpress.com/

To Read Fantasy, Myth and Magical Realism Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundifantasymythandmagicalrealism.wordpress.com/

To Read Sexual Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: The Varieties of Sexul Experience: https://spiritusmundivarietiesofsexualexperience.wordpress.com/

To Read Spy, Espionage and Counter-terrorism Thriller Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: http://spiritusmundispyespionagecounterterrorism.wordpress.com/

To Read Geopolitical and World War Three Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi:https://spiritusmundigeopoliticalworldwar3.wordpress.com/

To Read Spiritual and Religious Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundionspiritualityandreligion.wordpress.com/

To Read about the Global Campaign for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly in Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundiunitednationsparliamentaryassembly.wordpress.com/

To Read Poetry from Spiritus Mundihttps://spiritusmundipoetry.wordpress.com/

For Discussions on World Literature and Literary Criticism in Spiritus Mundi: http://worldliteratureandliterarycriticism.wordpress.com/

For Discussions of World History and World Civilization in Spiritus Mundi: https://worldhistoryandcivilizationspiritusmundi.wordpress.com/

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Vote for Your Choice of Actor to Play Etienne Dearlove, Superspy in the Movie Version of the New Thriller Novel Spiritus Mundi!———–Daniel Craig, Pierce Brosnan, Colin Firth, Jeremy Irons, Daniel Day Lewis, Russel Crowe !!!

robertalexandersheppard's avatarRobert Sheppard Literary Blog & World Literature Forum

Related Links and Websites: Spiritus Mundi, Novel by Robert Sheppard

For Introduction and Overview of the Novel and Movie: https://spiritusmundinovel.wordpress.com/

For Author’s Blog: https://robertalexandersheppard.wordpress.com/

To Read a Sample Chapter from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundisamplechapters.wordpress.com/

To Read Fantasy, Myth and Magical Realism Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundifantasymythandmagicalrealism.wordpress.com/

To Read Sexual Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: The Varieties of Sexul Experience: https://spiritusmundivarietiesofsexualexperience.wordpress.com/

To Read Spy, Espionage and Counter-terrorism Thriller Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: http://spiritusmundispyespionagecounterterrorism.wordpress.com/

To Read Geopolitical and World War Three Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi:https://spiritusmundigeopoliticalworldwar3.wordpress.com/

To Read Spiritual and Religious Excerpts from Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundionspiritualityandreligion.wordpress.com/

To Read about the Global Campaign for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly in Spiritus Mundi: https://spiritusmundiunitednationsparliamentaryassembly.wordpress.com/

To Read Poetry from Spiritus Mundihttps://spiritusmundipoetry.wordpress.com/

For Discussions on World Literature and Literary Criticism in Spiritus Mundi: http://worldliteratureandliterarycriticism.wordpress.com/

For Discussions of World History and World Civilization in Spiritus Mundi: https://worldhistoryandcivilizationspiritusmundi.wordpress.com/

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