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Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death / SUSAN WRIGHT

Swansea University Author: SUSAN WRIGHT

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DOI (Published version): 10.23889/SUthesis.67885

Abstract

Despite cultural differences, beliefs concerning the possibility of life after death are widespread, as is the concept of fate as an external force. However, the inevitability of death does not produce agreement about its significance. When considered through the lenses of religion, mythology, philos...

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Published: Swansea, Wales, UK 2024
Institution: Swansea University
Degree level: Doctoral
Degree name: Ph.D
Supervisor: Bilton, Alan, J. ; Rhydderch, Francesca, J.
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa67885
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first_indexed 2024-10-02T09:40:57Z
last_indexed 2024-10-02T09:40:57Z
id cronfa67885
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spelling v2 67885 2024-10-02 Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death 47cd6d5c1bfbd862fe0b894a6ef60e45 SUSAN WRIGHT SUSAN WRIGHT true false 2024-10-02 Despite cultural differences, beliefs concerning the possibility of life after death are widespread, as is the concept of fate as an external force. However, the inevitability of death does not produce agreement about its significance. When considered through the lenses of religion, mythology, philosophy, psychology, science and fiction, theories concerning the ending of life are as contradictory as they are diverse. This project examines the effects of death on the living through the psychology of loss and bereavement, neuroscientific discoveries of brain function, religious and philosophical approaches to immortality as well as the evolution and role of myth in making sense of existence. By placing Greek mythology alongside twenty first century life, the novel aligns myth with lived experience, demonstrating that humanity’s inevitable fate evokes the coexistence of the mystical and supernatural with the reality of grief. This submission consists of two parts. The creative component is a novel, in which the Greek Goddess of fate ends one life and then fails to end another. In the subsequent narrative, both she, and those affected by her actions must find their way through complex emotions and beliefs related to the prospect of death and its aftermath in order to come to terms with their new reality. This is then followed by a critical exegesis exploring the themes outlined above. E-Thesis Swansea, Wales, UK Mythology, Immortality, Psychology, Death, Grief, Faith, Fate 25 9 2024 2024-09-25 10.23889/SUthesis.67885 COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University Bilton, Alan, J. ; Rhydderch, Francesca, J. Doctoral Ph.D 2024-10-04T09:35:33.0501770 2024-10-02T10:38:23.9708870 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - English Literature, Creative Writing SUSAN WRIGHT 1 67885__31511__32f2d89dbc804545b5b269371be01d22.pdf Wright_Susan_A_PhD_Thesis_Final_Cronfa.pdf 2024-10-02T10:50:17.8048935 Output 1527021 application/pdf E-Thesis – open access true Copyright: The author, Susan Ann Wright, 2024. true eng
title Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death
spellingShingle Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death
SUSAN WRIGHT
title_short Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death
title_full Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death
title_fullStr Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death
title_full_unstemmed Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death
title_sort Threads. Fate, Faith and Fiction: How the Mythology of Immortality Relates to the Psychological Impact of Death
author_id_str_mv 47cd6d5c1bfbd862fe0b894a6ef60e45
author_id_fullname_str_mv 47cd6d5c1bfbd862fe0b894a6ef60e45_***_SUSAN WRIGHT
author SUSAN WRIGHT
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department_str School of Culture and Communication - English Literature, Creative Writing{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - English Literature, Creative Writing
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description Despite cultural differences, beliefs concerning the possibility of life after death are widespread, as is the concept of fate as an external force. However, the inevitability of death does not produce agreement about its significance. When considered through the lenses of religion, mythology, philosophy, psychology, science and fiction, theories concerning the ending of life are as contradictory as they are diverse. This project examines the effects of death on the living through the psychology of loss and bereavement, neuroscientific discoveries of brain function, religious and philosophical approaches to immortality as well as the evolution and role of myth in making sense of existence. By placing Greek mythology alongside twenty first century life, the novel aligns myth with lived experience, demonstrating that humanity’s inevitable fate evokes the coexistence of the mystical and supernatural with the reality of grief. This submission consists of two parts. The creative component is a novel, in which the Greek Goddess of fate ends one life and then fails to end another. In the subsequent narrative, both she, and those affected by her actions must find their way through complex emotions and beliefs related to the prospect of death and its aftermath in order to come to terms with their new reality. This is then followed by a critical exegesis exploring the themes outlined above.
published_date 2024-09-25T09:35:32Z
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