It seems as though every culture or mythological system has death myths. The preoccupation with the afterlife is something that has transferred very quickly into our modern world. We see it with the never-ending pursuit of that youthful glow. In Ancient Greece, Sisyphus’s obsession over not dying led him to trick Gods, force his wife to not bury him, and negotiating with the goddess Persephone. He was able to trick death two times, but the third time was his failure. As punishment, he is forced to roll an enchanted boulder up a hill for eternity. It is his Sisyphean task.
Join me as I give a summary of the myth of Sisyphus, talk about how I connected the myth to modern poetry, and question how I will greet death when he comes for me.
I’ve made this Google Doc of How I Map out My Year of Mythology to help you. In it, I have links to resources, websites, and myths. This is a living document, so I am continually adding to it as I find new things, record podcasts, write blog posts, and create products for teachers.
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Read the transcript HERE
Links Mentioned
Ancient Greece’s Most Wanted Podcast Notes – to listen to with your students. It retells the myth of Sisyphus.
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