Okay, vlogging has been challenging this weekend. First, we didn't get a vlog done yesterday, because it was my birthday so we were off doing birthday things instead of working. Then, we filmed a vlog today about abilities (as promised!), but John's iPad is throwing a massive tantrum and failed to render it three times in a row, after which is has now failed to upload it twice and counting. We're trying to get it to behave itself, but it may be a little while coming.
But that's okay, because we have a very special guest star to the rescue: GriffinGuy24, our friend who is a South American mythology wizard, recorded this excellent vlog about the Guarani and their myths, particularly the Amazonian god Yurupari. Some of you may have seen it when he posted the link in our last vlog, but in case you didn't, here it is - go forth and learn about crazy jungle gender politics!
Hooray! I love guest blogs!
Showing posts with label Guarani. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guarani. Show all posts
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Saturday, December 14, 2013
American Awesomesauce
I hope you guys forgive the general quality of this vlog. I'm tired and apparently my video camera is, too, but I'm here anyway!
Question: So, I know that this is sort of coming out of nowhere, but I was wondering if you could talk about the White Buffalo Calf Woman. Do you think she's Legend 12, and do you think the Lakota have enough Legend 12 gods that they might one day in the future qualify for a write-up (after the Navajo. Go Navajo!)?
Question: Since the other options on the poll are getting it, could you tell us a little bit about Navajo myth and culture?
Question: Guarani mythology eh? Yeah, can uh, can we get some o' that here? I mean, not right away, 'course, but, ya know, eventually maybe? Least a little?
The problem with doing these posts about various cultures is that now I want to write four new pantheons at once!
Question: So, I know that this is sort of coming out of nowhere, but I was wondering if you could talk about the White Buffalo Calf Woman. Do you think she's Legend 12, and do you think the Lakota have enough Legend 12 gods that they might one day in the future qualify for a write-up (after the Navajo. Go Navajo!)?
Question: Since the other options on the poll are getting it, could you tell us a little bit about Navajo myth and culture?
Question: Guarani mythology eh? Yeah, can uh, can we get some o' that here? I mean, not right away, 'course, but, ya know, eventually maybe? Least a little?
The problem with doing these posts about various cultures is that now I want to write four new pantheons at once!
Labels:
Amazon,
Guarani,
Navajo,
North America,
White Buffalo Calf Woman
Friday, October 4, 2013
Lions and Jaguars and Bears, Oh My!
Question: Can you guys do a blog about the cool jaguar gods across the Central and South American pantheons? - griffinguy24 (as if you couldn't fucking guess)
We definitely could guess, but we're always willing to talk about jaguar awesomeness with you, Griff!
Mesoamerican and South American mythologies abound with jaguar gods and magical jaguar heroes. This is one of the things that sometimes confuses people into thinking that all those south-of-the-equator religions are the same or mostly the same, but of course that's not what's going on at all; what's going on is that jaguars are the apex predator of that area as well as stunning to look at and violently dangerous toward mankind, and as a result they're a natural place to turn to for mythic tales and symbolism. Jaguars are all over southern American mythology for the same reason lions are all over middle eastern mythology and bears all over northern American mythology; those are the big, obviously important, possibly divine and definitely scary creatures of those areas, so they naturally become associated with gods and monsters.
Of course, the jaguar god we all know and hate to love the most is probably Tezcatlipoca, the Aztec god of darkness, the night, scary magical shenanigans and being relentlessly horrible to everyone else in his pantheon. Not only is he frequently shown with jaguar attributes or body parts, but thanks to the Aztec concept of the nahualli, he is a jaguar in his other half, Tepeyollotl, the heart of the mountain, who was conceived of as so monstrously strong and terrible that he could cause earthquakes and disasters with his flailings. When Tezcatlipoca was the sun and Quetzalcoatl knocked him from his preeminent position in the heavens, he destroyed the First World by having every living thing in it eaten by jaguars, which is probably not in anyone's top ten ways to go. Forget zombie apocalypse; jaguar apocalypse is fucking terrifying.
A little bit south of the Aztecs we come to the Maya, who have several jaguar-related deities, the most prominent of which is Ix Chel, the scary old goddess of flooding, wisdom and doing whatever she wants, much to everyone else's discomfort. Jaguar imagery is extremely widespread among Maya gods and many of them may sport jaguar spots on their faces or jaguar fangs in their mouths as well as the "jaguar eye", a particular way of drawing a square eye that denotes a connection to the animal, and Ix Chel often turns up with these as well as fearsome jaguar claws on her fingers. She's credited with giving birth to several children who were jaguars, although the myth isn't always clear on whether these wree normal animals - making it perilous to kill jaguars without possible incurring her wrath - or jaguar gods. Right behind her is Xbalanque, the second half of the famous Hero Twins, whose very name includes the Maya word for jaguar ("balam") and who also tends to appear with jaguar attributes (especially jaguar fur on his body and face), which probably helped him and his brother manage the terrible House of Jaguars in Xibalba without being eaten alive on their way through. The sun god of the Maya, K'inich Ahau, is also often credited with being a jaguar deity, thanks to similar iconography and a few mentions of jaguars as his totem creatures as well as strong connection to the Terrestrial Jaguar God or Underworld Jaguar God, believed to be the form he takes on when he brings the sun through the Underworld during the night, but since he's the sun god there's some mention of those being "golden jaguars", which might suggest that the Maya were actually talking about pumas they encountered in the mountainous areas of their territory. We like that approach and it's the one we used in the K'uh, because we've got way enough jaguars around here already, but he also might be considered a jaguar god to be reckoned with.
And that's really just a small sampling of jaguar gods from the Maya, who are alllll about jaguars, all the time, anywhere you can name. I can think of at least three more that are probably running around at Legend 10 or so.
And, of course, who can forget the Olmecs, the old and mysterious early culture of Mesoamerica who we know very little about and who various weird New Age magazines seem to think were aliens? The Olmecs didn't leave any writing we can decipher and were around so much earlier than most of the other Mesoamerican religions that most of their artifacts have been badly damaged, but we know they were all about some jaguars, most aptly expressed by this monstrosity of a thing we found:
What is that thing? Who is it? We have no idea, but it's got the fangs and it's large and in charge.
Further south, the Inca people don't have an official jaguar god in their pantheon, but instead have mentions of dangerous jaguar monsters that must be overcome or harnessed by the gods in order to keep things running smoothly. One myth mentions that Viracocha, the creator-god of the pantheon, had to defeat a rampaging jaguar when he created the world lest it devour all his creations; another popular belief is that lunar eclipses are in fact the same jaguar monster attacking and attempting to swallow Mama Quilla, the moon goddess, leading to the Inca practice of running outside, making a lot of noise and throwing things at the sky in an attempt to help frighten it off and save her. When most of the world's mythologies say "OMFG ECLIPSE HIDE EVERYONE HIDE", you have to give props to the people who instead go "OMFG ECLIPSE GET OUT THERE MEN GET OUT THERE AND SHOW IT WHO'S BOSS". But the lack of an official god of jaguars doesn't prevent them from still being a huge deal in Inca mythology; one of their most important magical phenomena is that of the runauturuncu, literally man-jaguar, which is basically about what it sounds like - a scary magical were-jaguar. Many ceremonial Inca sites and works of art show priests and servants of the gods able to turn into jaguars, and in modern Quechuan myth the story has also grown up that anyone can become a runauturnucu by making a deal with Supay, the god of mines and death (although of course making deals with Supay is a terrible fucking idea but you know people do it anyway).
But the Inca are far from having the monopoly on were-jaguar shenanigans down south of the equator. In the rest of South America, there are fewer of what we tend to think of as "formal" mythologies - that is, there are certainly tons of people with their own unique mythology and religions, but few that are as large and hierarchical as the Inca or the pantheons of Mesoamerica, leading to lots of small religions with only two or three gods or less formal animistic religions that believe in spirits and natural powers but not necessarily gods. But you'd better believe they believed in jaguars, especially the peoples of the Amazon, who were quite aware that being eaten by a jaguar was a real possibility for the end of their lives if they weren't careful on hunting trips and traveling missions. Several of the native peoples of Bolivia and the northern rainforest center their entire spiritual life around jaguars - their bones and semen are used for ritual medicine and potions, their furs worn for protection, their good nature invoked to ease hunting, and young men in some areas even today still have to go on a jaguar hunt to prove their adulthood (in fact, this is the reason that Bolivia is sadly one of the few South American countries that still allows trophy hunting of the endangered animal in spite of international conservation efforts - the jaguar hunt is very ingrained and the government isn't particularly worried about rooting it out). Other parts of the Amazon abound with stories of anthropomorphic jaguars - either people who can turn into jaguars or jaguars who can turn into people, or weird hybrid creatures that embody both - and the stories of their activities vary with an endless variety of craziness. Some say that jaguars devour the souls of the dead, others that it was jaguars who granted mankind fire and taught them how to hunt, still others that jaguars are the "brothers-in-law" of humanity and therefore off-limits for hunting or irritating, and a million other little things depending on a peoples' location and how many jaguars they had to deal with in ancient times.
No discussion of the Amazon mythologies is complete without the total wackiness of the Guarani, a southern Amazonian ethnic group that has some of the scariest and most monster-heavy mythology on the entire continent. Their jaguar god goes by the name of Teju-Jagua (literally "lizard-jaguar", in the Tupa language which is where we get the word "jaguar" from, by the way - before that, the Europeans just called them "American tigers") and is one of the monstrous sons of Tau, the evil oppositional god who plagues the pantheon with his trickery and general jerkfacedness. Because he was the son of Tau (and the product of rape, in most stories), he was cursed by the moon goddess and mother of the pantheon Arasy, and thus born monstrous and horrifying, with seven jaguar heads grafted onto a scaly iguana's body and the ability to breathe fire and strike onlookers blind with his ugliness. The poor guy isn't particularly beloved by the Guarani for obvious reasons, but the creator god of the pantheon, Tupa, took pity on him enough to calm him down so that he isn't a ravening monster and put him to work guarding the treasures of the earth and water, which keeps him busy so he isn't tempted to go about eating everyone and everything. Even so, smaller versions of him - his children - are said to lurk in rivers and deep pools and drag the unwary in to be eaten, so it generally behooves one to avoid his territories.
By the way, an alternative tradition identifies Teju-Jagua's heads as dogs instead of jaguars. Possibly because no one can tell what in the name of shit is supposed to be going on up there.
We definitely could guess, but we're always willing to talk about jaguar awesomeness with you, Griff!
Mesoamerican and South American mythologies abound with jaguar gods and magical jaguar heroes. This is one of the things that sometimes confuses people into thinking that all those south-of-the-equator religions are the same or mostly the same, but of course that's not what's going on at all; what's going on is that jaguars are the apex predator of that area as well as stunning to look at and violently dangerous toward mankind, and as a result they're a natural place to turn to for mythic tales and symbolism. Jaguars are all over southern American mythology for the same reason lions are all over middle eastern mythology and bears all over northern American mythology; those are the big, obviously important, possibly divine and definitely scary creatures of those areas, so they naturally become associated with gods and monsters.
Of course, the jaguar god we all know and hate to love the most is probably Tezcatlipoca, the Aztec god of darkness, the night, scary magical shenanigans and being relentlessly horrible to everyone else in his pantheon. Not only is he frequently shown with jaguar attributes or body parts, but thanks to the Aztec concept of the nahualli, he is a jaguar in his other half, Tepeyollotl, the heart of the mountain, who was conceived of as so monstrously strong and terrible that he could cause earthquakes and disasters with his flailings. When Tezcatlipoca was the sun and Quetzalcoatl knocked him from his preeminent position in the heavens, he destroyed the First World by having every living thing in it eaten by jaguars, which is probably not in anyone's top ten ways to go. Forget zombie apocalypse; jaguar apocalypse is fucking terrifying.
Tezcatlipoca as Tepeyollotl, wreaking the usual amount of havoc
A little bit south of the Aztecs we come to the Maya, who have several jaguar-related deities, the most prominent of which is Ix Chel, the scary old goddess of flooding, wisdom and doing whatever she wants, much to everyone else's discomfort. Jaguar imagery is extremely widespread among Maya gods and many of them may sport jaguar spots on their faces or jaguar fangs in their mouths as well as the "jaguar eye", a particular way of drawing a square eye that denotes a connection to the animal, and Ix Chel often turns up with these as well as fearsome jaguar claws on her fingers. She's credited with giving birth to several children who were jaguars, although the myth isn't always clear on whether these wree normal animals - making it perilous to kill jaguars without possible incurring her wrath - or jaguar gods. Right behind her is Xbalanque, the second half of the famous Hero Twins, whose very name includes the Maya word for jaguar ("balam") and who also tends to appear with jaguar attributes (especially jaguar fur on his body and face), which probably helped him and his brother manage the terrible House of Jaguars in Xibalba without being eaten alive on their way through. The sun god of the Maya, K'inich Ahau, is also often credited with being a jaguar deity, thanks to similar iconography and a few mentions of jaguars as his totem creatures as well as strong connection to the Terrestrial Jaguar God or Underworld Jaguar God, believed to be the form he takes on when he brings the sun through the Underworld during the night, but since he's the sun god there's some mention of those being "golden jaguars", which might suggest that the Maya were actually talking about pumas they encountered in the mountainous areas of their territory. We like that approach and it's the one we used in the K'uh, because we've got way enough jaguars around here already, but he also might be considered a jaguar god to be reckoned with.
Ix Chel looking terrifying as usual, with a jaguar in one hand among other animals
A Yaxchilan Maya king impersonating Xbalanque in a ritual dance, complete with full jaguar spots
K'inich Ahau as the Terrestrial Jaguar, about to charge through the underworld like a boss
And that's really just a small sampling of jaguar gods from the Maya, who are alllll about jaguars, all the time, anywhere you can name. I can think of at least three more that are probably running around at Legend 10 or so.
And, of course, who can forget the Olmecs, the old and mysterious early culture of Mesoamerica who we know very little about and who various weird New Age magazines seem to think were aliens? The Olmecs didn't leave any writing we can decipher and were around so much earlier than most of the other Mesoamerican religions that most of their artifacts have been badly damaged, but we know they were all about some jaguars, most aptly expressed by this monstrosity of a thing we found:
The Seated Jaguar God, or so some scholars kind of suppose
What is that thing? Who is it? We have no idea, but it's got the fangs and it's large and in charge.
Further south, the Inca people don't have an official jaguar god in their pantheon, but instead have mentions of dangerous jaguar monsters that must be overcome or harnessed by the gods in order to keep things running smoothly. One myth mentions that Viracocha, the creator-god of the pantheon, had to defeat a rampaging jaguar when he created the world lest it devour all his creations; another popular belief is that lunar eclipses are in fact the same jaguar monster attacking and attempting to swallow Mama Quilla, the moon goddess, leading to the Inca practice of running outside, making a lot of noise and throwing things at the sky in an attempt to help frighten it off and save her. When most of the world's mythologies say "OMFG ECLIPSE HIDE EVERYONE HIDE", you have to give props to the people who instead go "OMFG ECLIPSE GET OUT THERE MEN GET OUT THERE AND SHOW IT WHO'S BOSS". But the lack of an official god of jaguars doesn't prevent them from still being a huge deal in Inca mythology; one of their most important magical phenomena is that of the runauturuncu, literally man-jaguar, which is basically about what it sounds like - a scary magical were-jaguar. Many ceremonial Inca sites and works of art show priests and servants of the gods able to turn into jaguars, and in modern Quechuan myth the story has also grown up that anyone can become a runauturnucu by making a deal with Supay, the god of mines and death (although of course making deals with Supay is a terrible fucking idea but you know people do it anyway).
A runauturuncu, looking pleased about life, because what's not to like here?
But the Inca are far from having the monopoly on were-jaguar shenanigans down south of the equator. In the rest of South America, there are fewer of what we tend to think of as "formal" mythologies - that is, there are certainly tons of people with their own unique mythology and religions, but few that are as large and hierarchical as the Inca or the pantheons of Mesoamerica, leading to lots of small religions with only two or three gods or less formal animistic religions that believe in spirits and natural powers but not necessarily gods. But you'd better believe they believed in jaguars, especially the peoples of the Amazon, who were quite aware that being eaten by a jaguar was a real possibility for the end of their lives if they weren't careful on hunting trips and traveling missions. Several of the native peoples of Bolivia and the northern rainforest center their entire spiritual life around jaguars - their bones and semen are used for ritual medicine and potions, their furs worn for protection, their good nature invoked to ease hunting, and young men in some areas even today still have to go on a jaguar hunt to prove their adulthood (in fact, this is the reason that Bolivia is sadly one of the few South American countries that still allows trophy hunting of the endangered animal in spite of international conservation efforts - the jaguar hunt is very ingrained and the government isn't particularly worried about rooting it out). Other parts of the Amazon abound with stories of anthropomorphic jaguars - either people who can turn into jaguars or jaguars who can turn into people, or weird hybrid creatures that embody both - and the stories of their activities vary with an endless variety of craziness. Some say that jaguars devour the souls of the dead, others that it was jaguars who granted mankind fire and taught them how to hunt, still others that jaguars are the "brothers-in-law" of humanity and therefore off-limits for hunting or irritating, and a million other little things depending on a peoples' location and how many jaguars they had to deal with in ancient times.
No discussion of the Amazon mythologies is complete without the total wackiness of the Guarani, a southern Amazonian ethnic group that has some of the scariest and most monster-heavy mythology on the entire continent. Their jaguar god goes by the name of Teju-Jagua (literally "lizard-jaguar", in the Tupa language which is where we get the word "jaguar" from, by the way - before that, the Europeans just called them "American tigers") and is one of the monstrous sons of Tau, the evil oppositional god who plagues the pantheon with his trickery and general jerkfacedness. Because he was the son of Tau (and the product of rape, in most stories), he was cursed by the moon goddess and mother of the pantheon Arasy, and thus born monstrous and horrifying, with seven jaguar heads grafted onto a scaly iguana's body and the ability to breathe fire and strike onlookers blind with his ugliness. The poor guy isn't particularly beloved by the Guarani for obvious reasons, but the creator god of the pantheon, Tupa, took pity on him enough to calm him down so that he isn't a ravening monster and put him to work guarding the treasures of the earth and water, which keeps him busy so he isn't tempted to go about eating everyone and everything. Even so, smaller versions of him - his children - are said to lurk in rivers and deep pools and drag the unwary in to be eaten, so it generally behooves one to avoid his territories.
What the living fuck, Guarani mythology?
By the way, an alternative tradition identifies Teju-Jagua's heads as dogs instead of jaguars. Possibly because no one can tell what in the name of shit is supposed to be going on up there.
Labels:
Amazon,
Apu,
gods,
Guarani,
history,
jaguars,
K'uh,
Kin'ich Ahau,
Teotl,
Tezcatlipoca
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)