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Hermes the Thief: The Evolution of a Myth
 
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Hermes the Thief: The Evolution of a Myth [Paperback]

Norman O. Brown (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 1, 1990
Hermes - trickster and culture hero, divine child and patron of steady action, master of magic words, seducer and whisper - is a vital and complex figure in Greek mythology. Who is this tricky shapechanger? A classic, prescient work dealing with myth and cult which traces the evolution of Hermes from sacred stoneheap and phallus to Homeric Hymn to Hermes and the Hesiodic poems.


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About the Author

NORMAN O. BROWN is author of Life Against Death, Love's Body, and Closing Time.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 164 pages
  • Publisher: Lindisfarne Books (March 1, 1990)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0940262266
  • ISBN-13: 978-0940262263
  • Product Dimensions: 7.5 x 5.2 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.7 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,716,412 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hermes the trickster god, July 14, 2004
By 
C. B Collins Jr. (Atlanta, GA United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Hermes the Thief: The Evolution of a Myth (Paperback)
This book is somewhat dry and scholarly but well documented and reasoned. The book traces the evolution of the Hermes archatype through various periods of archaic to classical antiquity.

Hermes is presented as the giver of gifts that can be used for good or evil in the story of Pandora. Brown points out that early myths reveal the box to be full of multiple gifts, which could be true gifts or curses depending on the way they are used.

He is also presented as the cunning infant who steals his brother Apollo's cattle and then is so witty when discovered that he angers neither Apollo nor thier father Zeus.

He is sometimes pictured as the common man, the merchant and then at other times as the beautiful brother of Apollo, patrons of male beauty and athletics. Apollo and Hermes often shared altars in Greek cult religion.

His image is the garden statue complete with erect phallus and smiling face. These statues frequently were blocks with a Hermes head emerging from the top and a phallus emerging from the side. These ancient Hermes images were in every garden, every crossroad, every front door entrance. He was the god of boundaries and crossing boundaries and thus his image must honor every crossroads. Trickster, merchant, thief, he is the god of the marketplace where tribes meet and trade. He is the messenger of his father Zeus and also the god who transports the dead into the underworld.

I would recommend this book to students of classical antiquity. It was not entertaining enough for the casual recreational reader.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly Detailed and Thoroughly Documented, September 20, 2009
After having read Norman O. Brown's monograph "Hermes the Thief; The Evolution of a Myth", I'm sure I will soon want to look into his later and more famous works "Life Against Death" and "Love's Body". I feel so strongly about this that I may have to break down and order them from Amazon. I was lucky enough to run across this used paperback copy of "Hermes the Thief" at a library sale. And I'm glad I did, for I otherwise had no intention of reading it, seeing how I had never heard of it or the author.

You see, I have a very holistic reading program. My plan is not to plan. The madness of this method has proved very rewarding at times, as in the case of this book. Let me say up front, for those who want to cut and run now, that this is a very scholarly book, though a short one(about 150 pages). It is a monograph, which I take it, is one of those publish-or-perish obligations of college professors. The online dictionary tells me a monograph is "a highly detailed and thoroughly documented study or paper written about a limited area of a subject or field of inquiry".

The book certainly fulfills that definition. The footnotes of references and more detailed information are copious; there are two appendices and a huge bibliography. Well, if you are still with me, now for some good news. This is an extremely interesting book. Even though it is an exploration of a limited area of mythology - the question of why there should have been a Greek deity of theft - the development of Brown's thesis gives us, incidentally, an almost panoramic view of Homeric and classical Greek culture.

In the first chapter, "Tribal Myths",Brown challenges what was then the scholarly interpretation of the symbolism of Hermes the Thief; that the common practice of cattle-raiding in pre-classical Greece had given rise to the myth of Hermes as patron god of theft. Methodically examining the depictions of Hermes in "The Homeric Hymn to Hermes", in the Greek tragedians, in Homer, and Hesiod - particularly in Hesiod's rendition of the myth of Pandora, Brown shows that Hermes was originally more connected with stealth than robbery and might be identified as a trickster-god, a deity common to many primitive cultures.

Using linguistic analysis of Greek words, the author shows a further more primitive association of Hermes with the use of magic. He cites a passage from Frazer's "Golden Bough" to support the proposition that, on the most primitive level, Hermes was a magician, and in the transition from magic to religion, was merely a "deified sorcerer". Thus the evolution of Hermes was from Magician to Trickster to Thief. The role of magician explains another of Hermes' functions, as patron of craftsmen and workmen, for primitive people associate skill with magical powers.

Chapter 2, "Tribal Customs", examines the meaning of the basic rituals of the cult of Hermes in relation to the sacred stone heap and the sacred phallus. The sacred stone heaps, or herms, relate to Hermes as a god of boundaries, at a time when people rarely traveled beyond the boundaries of their tribal ground, and conducted trade with strangers at these stone heap markers. Brown shows that the sacred phallus, rather than being a fertility symbol, was actually an apotropaic symbol; that is, one used to ward off evil. Combining these two meanings, Hermes can be seen to be a god who uses his magical powers as an aid to successful barter at the boundary herms. The later placement of herms in the agora, when strangers could freely enter for barter, reinforced the idea of Hermes as the god of commerce, a wily trickster-trader god.

In chapter 3, "The Age of Homer", it is shown how the evolution from the original primitive concept of Hermes as an independent deity to being a subordinate of Zeus, paralleled the transition of Greek society from separated, independent tribes to a society dominated by kings ruling over different social classes.

Chapter 4, "The Age of Hesiod", poses the question as to why Hesiod represents Hermes as being a malicious troublemaker for having given Pandora "The mind of a cur and a stealthy disposition". Hesiod would definitely be politically incorrect today because he was a confirmed misogynist. But according to Brown's analysis, Hesiod's animosity toward Hermes boils down to a resentment against the supplanting of the old, independent pastoral life by the new age of merchants, whom Hesiod regarded as no better than thieves; Hermes was, of course the patron of both thieves and commerce.

Chapter 5 gives an analysis of "The Homeric Hymn to Hermes", in which the new-born Hermes steals fifty of the cattle of his brother Apollo. The aristocratic Apollo and the trickster-thief Hermes eventually come to terms when Hermes offers Apollo the use of his new invention, the lyre, and Apollo reciprocates by allowing Hermes the use of his cattle. Hermes is seen as getting the better of Apollo because he got to keep the cattle and only shared the use of the lyre. In this hymn, Hermes expresses to his mother his ambition to have equal status with Apollo. Brown shows that "The Homeric Hymn to Hermes" was written at a time when the lower classes of merchants and craftsmen were gaining economic and political power which rivaled that of the aristocracy, whose wealth had been based on land ownership. Thus, the edge enjoyed by Hermes over Apollo reflected the sentiments of the composer in favor of the up-and-coming tradesman class.

In the last chapter, "Athens", Brown shows, through an amazing sequence of historical sleuthing, that the "Homeric Hymn to Hermes" was almost certainly composed for the tyrant Hipparchus in 519 or 520 b.c. This he manages to do by relating the few verifiable dates of events which can be connected to or excluded from the time of its composition. This is actually more of a virtuoso performance which, though very interesting, really doesn't add much to the themes already discussed in previous chapters.

So, basically the book shows how the evolution of the character of Hermes in myth reflects the social and economic evolution of Greece from pre-Homeric times up to the classical era. Put in those simple terms, it sounds rather dry, but the presentation by Norman O. Brown made it, to my mind, an entertaining glimpse of a fascinating slice of history.
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4 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This starts with wars fought for cows, April 18, 2003
By 
Bruce P. Barten (Saint Paul, Minnesota, U.S.A.) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Hermes the Thief: The Evolution of a Myth (Paperback)
I know more about the very beginning of this book than about the rest of it, but I consider it a fundamental approach to understanding the nature of war as it is understood in ancient cultural situations. Hermes is one of the earliest figures that we might associate with such struggles, being described as an infant in comparison with his older brother Apollo, in early versions of a myth about Greek gods that forms a theme of this book. There might have been a number of scholars who knew what the basic scheme of references cited in this book when it first appeared in 1947 were all about. I assume that today, people may be vaguely aware of a few themes that the book inspires, but not much else. When Homer wrote, cattle were assumed to be the reason for going to war:

"Cattle-raiding, as depicted in Homer, was a public enterprise, led by the kings and participated in by the whole people. It is described as a war--a resort to force, and open force. The institution appears to have been a common heritage of all the Indo-European peoples and to have had everywhere the same general characteristics. To cite one illustrative detail: the Sanskrit word for `war' means literally `desire for more cows.' Coexistent with this institution of warlike plundering, or robbery, and terminologically distinguished from it in the Indo-European languages, was another type of appropriation, called theft. Theft is appropriation by stealth; robbery is open and forcible appropriation." (pp. 5-6).

I do not have a "Homeric Hymn to Hermes" to see how well it departs from this distinction. "Side by side with occasional terminology suitable to the raider appear terms suitable only to the thief. The cattle-raid described in the `Hymn' is not the usual resort to open force, but a peculiarly stealthy operation. There is no more incisive delineation of the contrast between the cunning trickster and the fighting hero than in the `Hymn,' where Hermes, a helpless infant relying only on his phenomenal cunning, challenges Apollo, the embodiment of physical power and the majesty of established authority." (pp. 7-8).

Much modern drama is based on traits ascribed to the god Hermes. "That gift was not merely `stealthiness'; it was `stealthiness and skill at the oath.' `Skill at the oath means guile or cunning in the use of the oath and derives from the primitive idea that an oath was binding only in its literal sense; a cunning person might legitimately manipulate it in order to deceive, as occurs often enough in Greek mythology. In the `Homeric Hymn,' when Hermes uses just such an oath to deny that he has stolen Apollo's cattle, he is said to show `good skill.' " (pp. 8-9).

I have a translation by Richmond Lattimore of works by Hesiod, which confirms that Hermes was responsible for giving Pandora "lies and deceitful words and a stealthy disposition." (p. 9). As Lattimore renders the Greek myth, "but to Hermes, the guide, the slayer of Argos,/ he gave instructions/ to put in her the mind of a hussy,/ and a treacherous nature." Also: "But into her heart Hermes, the guide, the slayer of Argos,/ put lies, and wheedling words of falsehood, and a treacherous nature,/ made her as Zeus of the deep thunder wished,/ and he, the gods' herald, put a voice inside her, and gave her the name of woman,/ Pandora, ..." (HESIOD, pp. 25-27).

HERMES THE THIEF has an index which lists a lot of Greek names. Appendix A didn't help me much. Instead of providing an authoritative text for anything about Hermes, it engages in the kind of speculation that modern philologists use to decide who actually wrote the accounts that we now have. Appendix B, "The Text of the `Homeric Hymn to Hermes,' " only provides the Greek Oxford text for lines 533 and 515 on p. 150, lines 414-417 on pp. 151-152, with an alternate reading on p. 153, lines 418-420 on p. 153, and lines 471-474 on p. 154. Norman O. Brown's explanation of what these last lines mean is, "Hermes says he is willing to be to Apollo in the matter of the lyre what Zeus is to Apollo in the matter of prophecy--a typically impudent statement for Hermes to make." (p. 155).

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