Antecedents is both written and illustrated. Here,
Los is tormented at his smithy by the
Spectre in an illustration to
Jerusalem.
William Blake set out
his mythology in his "prophetic works" such as
Vala, or The Four Zoas. These name several original gods, such as
Urizen,
Orc,
Los,
Albion,
Rintrah,
Ahania and
Enitharmon. Later in the 19th century, stories by
George MacDonald and
H. Rider Haggard created fictional worlds; C. S. Lewis praised both for their "mythopoeic" gifts.
Lord Dunsany's 1905 book of short stories,
The Gods of Pegana, is linked by Dunsany's invented pantheon of deities who dwell in
Pegāna. It was followed by
Time and the Gods, by some stories in
The Sword of Welleran and Other Stories, and by
Tales of Three Hemispheres. In 1919, Dunsany told an American interviewer, "In
The Gods of Pegana I tried to account for the ocean and the moon. I don't know whether anyone else has ever tried that before." Dunsany's work influenced J.R.R. Tolkien's later writings.
T. S. Eliot's
The Waste Land (1922) was a deliberate attempt to model a 20th-century mythology patterned after the birth-rebirth motif described by the anthropologist and folklorist
James George Frazer.
J. R. R. Tolkien bust by
Faith Falcounbridge in
Exeter College, Oxford J. R. R. Tolkien wrote a poem titled
Mythopoeia following a discussion on the night of 19 September 1931 at
Magdalen College, Oxford, with
C. S. Lewis and
Hugo Dyson, in which he intended to explain and defend creative myth-making.
Tolkien's wider legendarium includes not only
origin myths,
creation myths, and an
epic poetry cycle, but also fictive
linguistics,
geology and
geography. He more succinctly explores the function of such myth-making, "subcreation" and "
Faery" in the short story
Leaf by Niggle (1945)
, the novella
Smith of Wootton Major (1967), and the essays
Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics (1936) and
On Fairy-Stories (1939). Written in 1939 for presentation by Tolkien at the
Andrew Lang lecture at the
University of St Andrews and published in print in 1947,
On Fairy-Stories explains "Faery" as both a fictitious realm and an
archetypal plane in the
psyche or
soul from whence Man derives his "subcreative" capacity. Tolkien emphasizes the importance of
language in the act of channeling "subcreation", speaking of the human linguistic faculty in general as well as the specifics of the language used in a given tradition, particularly in the form of story and song: , who travelled Finland recording
oral folklore, and then reconstructed the country's mythology. 1912 sketch for a mural,
Lönnrot and the Rune Singers, by
Akseli Gallen-Kallela Tolkien scholars have likened his views on the creation of myth to the
Christian concept of
Logos or "The Word", which is said to act as both "the [...] language of nature" spoken into being by God, and "a repetition in the finite mind of the eternal act of creation in the infinite I AM".
Verlyn Flieger wrote that
Elias Lönnrot intentionally created the
Kalevala as a mythology for Finland, giving it "a world of magic and mystery, a heroic age of story that may never have existed in precisely the form he gave it, but nevertheless fired Finland with a sense of its own independent worth." In her view, Tolkien,
who had read the Kalevala, "envisioned himself" doing exactly the same thing, except that
the mythology would be entirely fictive. Lönnrot had travelled the backwoods of Finland for 20 years, collecting stories and songs "from unlettered peasants". However Lewis later began to speak of Christianity as the one "true myth". Lewis wrote, "The story of Christ is simply a true myth: a myth working on us in the same way as the others, but with this tremendous difference that it really happened." Subsequently, his
Chronicles of Narnia is regarded as mythopoeia, with storylines referencing that Christian mythology, namely the narrative of a great
king who is sacrificed to save his people and is resurrected. Lewis's mythopoeic intent is often confused with
allegory, where the characters and world of Narnia would stand in direct equivalence with concepts and events from Christian theology and history, but Lewis repeatedly emphasized that an allegorical reading misses the point (the mythopoeia) of the Narnia stories. He shares this skepticism toward allegory with Tolkien, who disliked "conscious and intentional" allegory as it stood in opposition the broad and "inevitable" allegory of themes like "Fall" and "Mortality".
Superheroes of comic books In
The Mythos of the Superheroes and the Mythos of the Saints, Thomas Roberts observes that: The 1938-debuting
Superman, for example, sent from the "heavens" by his father to save humanity, is a messiah-type of character in the
Biblical tradition. Furthermore, along with the rest of
DC Comic's
Justice League of America, Superman watches over humanity from the
Watchtower in the skies; just as the
Greek gods do from
Mount Olympus.
In literary modernism In
modernist literature, mythopoeia served a crucial structural and philosophical function. For
modernist writers, this was not a nostalgic revival of ancient stories but a deliberate aesthetic strategy to impose order and meaning upon the profound fragmentation, disillusionment, and spiritual uncertainty that characterized modern experience. The modernist engagement with myth can be seen as a response to the collapse of traditional metaphysical certainties. As the movement grappled with a "growing alienation" from prevailing norms, myth offered a method to explore what scholar Scott Freer describes as "metaphysical perspectives that fall between material secularism and dogmatic religion". and
James Joyce's novel
Ulysses. == In film ==