Why classical myth and autism?

Why classical myth and autism?

The idea for this project started to take shape at a meeting in 2008 with a special needs teacher, who mentioned that, in her experience and those of her colleagues, autistic children often enjoy classical myth. I began to wonder why this might be the case, and whether – as a classicist who researches, and loves, classical myth – there was anything I could contribute. I started this blog to report on my progress which was often sporadic until the launch of the Warsaw-based European Research Council-funded project Our Mythical Childhood (2016-22) to trace the role of classics in children’s culture.

My key contribution to the project is an exploration of classics in autistic children’s culture, above all by producing myth-themed activities for autistic children. This blog shares my progress, often along Herculean paths, including to a book of lessons for autistic children focusing on the Choice of Hercules between two very different paths in life. The image above, illustrating the homepage of this blog, is one of the drawings by Steve K. Simons, the book's illustrator, of a chimneypiece panel in a neoclassical villa at Roehampton in South West London. The lessons centre on this panel.

Tuesday 14 April 2020

The labours of Hercules - why and how they still matter, though not necessarily for my project

I’m still not quite ready to do what I promised a few postings ago, namely to discuss “Hercules in a strange place.” This current posting will, however, do what I promised in the previous one, namely to continue looking at the relevance of Hercules for my topic. 

Since that previous posting, of Thursday of last week, just before the easter weekend, I’ve been thinking more about Lisa Maurice’s article in Hercules in children’s literature. I’ve also been mulling further over Alastair Blanshard’s exploration of the figure of Hercules in Western culture, and how far Hercules has been used by a range of receivers to express certain things about that culture. I’ve also been thinking further about Emma Stafford’s work into receptions of Hercules and their ongoing relevance.

Just over a year ago, Emma and her team at Leeds ran an event where people were invited to make postcards updating the Labours of Hercules to show the hero vying with contemporary problems. On resulting cards, the participants came up with depictions of Hercules battling such issues as climate change, corruption in politics and Brexit – indeed above all I think Brexit. As I looked at the postcards included on the Hercules Project site, I wondered whether, a year on, a key issue might be in relation to the current coronavirus pandemic. I took a break from looking at the website to check the BBC News. The first headline phrased the problem over getting enough personal protective equipment to NHS staff as “Herculean.”

So: Hercules continues to be relevant, or, at least, the labours of Hercules continue to resonate. I am going to run a little during this posting with the labours, and how and why they continue to “speak” and what the fit is – and is not…  – with my project.

When I’ve been talking about the activities I’m developing, I’m often asked why I’ve specifically opted for Hercules as the focus. And one thing that’s been asked is whether I chosen Hercules because he is always overcoming hardships: have I picked Hercules because he is the great doer of deeds - always coming against some hardship or other?

My answer is – “yes, in part”, and there is potential in Hercules’s labours in relations to the hardships that autistic people encounter and, but with a message of Hope: that they can be overcome. But this isn’t really where I am starting from with Hercules. But before getting to where I am starting from, I have been thinking about why the labours of Hercules should be the first thing that comes to people’s mind. And one reason is just how much the labours have been used to express different issues, and to show how it is possible to battle some issue in question – and to ty to vanquish it.

The labouring hero: Herakles and Lion wrestle on an Attic oinochoe
in the British Museum (E 621) of circa 520-500 BCE from Vulci.
In the pubic engagement event just over a year ago in Leeds, as I’ve said, it was the Labours and how they can speak to contemporary concerns that were the focus. The participants – both children and adults – enabled to become active receivers of classical myth, created postcards where Hercules deals with particular modern problems. The cards included Hercules facing a Hydra whose six heads were labelled B-R-E-X-I-T. For one participant, Hercules was “Remain” seeking to stop Brexit. For another, Hercules was managing to achieve Brexit. For one child, Hercules tries to save the world from its leaders, depicted as monsters. On another card, the Augean stables are the world, which Hercules’s tasks is to clean up. For one other, it is the daily labours of being a twenty-first century person that is the focus, and Hercules sits reading a long list of Terms and Conditions.

An exercise where children draw Hercules dealing with some challenge or danger or problem that speaks to them as autistic people might have potential. It could be something ‘huge’ or more ‘everyday’, like the Terms and Conditions-reading Hercules. After all, everything can be hard when you are autistic.

Plus, what about an activity from the point of view of the Hydra, the Lion, the stables even, where some feature of the natural world or the wilds is resisting the invasion of a hero intent on harness it, or defeating it? At a time when, during the coronavirus pandemic, pollution levels are dropping and dolphins are returning to the Venetian lagoon, this might be all the more timely.

But what I am especially interested in is not the labours but an episode that is less well-known, less well known now that is. I’ll say what the episode is in the next posting, when I will finally get to the strange place, and what Hercules is doing in this place and why what happens here – rather than the labours - will be my main focus.

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