Press Release
Look! Up in the Sky! It's a Bird! It's a Plane! It's... Gilgamesh?
(ARA) - Do you know where the archetype of the superhero originally
appeared? If you said Superman, you're probably an aficionado of
modern-day comics, rather than an ancient history buff. Oh, and
you'd be wrong.
The first written account of a superhero appears almost 4,800 years
ago -- pre-dating Homer, Vergil and even the Bible -- in the form
of Gilgamesh, the ruler of Uruk who is said to have actually existed
and ruled for 126 years.
One theory is that most ancient gods, like Zeus/Jupiter, Athena/Minerva,
and Venus/Aphrodite, were actual historical persons. After their
deaths, they were given certain hero attributes, for example: divine
parentage, miraculous survival in childhood, a trip to an exotic
place, a journey to the underworld, miracles, philanthropy, association
with the divine and ultimately, deified. Gilgamesh is the first
such god/hero or superhero. A modern-day superhero, on the other
hand, is a fictional hero blessed (or cursed, depending on how you
look at it) with many mythical or superhuman powers.
Fitting with pop culture's tendency to recycle the past, most superheroes
draw characteristics from legendary heroes of mythology. For instance,
Superman is able to fly, is nearly invulnerable and has incredible
strength. He is also handsome and intelligent. Does this sound like
anyone we know? Of course: the gods and demigods of Greek and Roman
mythology. They possessed great strength (Hercules), they had horses
that could fly (Bellerophon's Pegasus), or could fly themselves
(Hermes with his winged sandals), and most were immortal. Gilgamesh,
whose father was mortal and mother was divine, was no exception.
He possessed all the traits of a hero: physical strength, semi-divinity,
extraordinary beauty and power.
A new translation of the poem "The
Epic of Gilgamesh" has caught the attention of the academic
world with its easy-to-read, modern and lyrical rendition of the
ancient text. The first account of a superhero is not this epic's
only claim to fame. "The Epic of Gilgamesh" pre-dates the Bible
by about 2,000 years with its mention of a great flood to rid earth
of humankind, and it prefigures Homer's Odysseus as the first man
considering the pros and cons of immortality. "Gilgamesh" is also
the first account of the themes found in the "Adam and Eve" story,
the serpent responsible for the loss of immortality, and a paradise
regained, pre-dating the Christian concept of heaven.
This new translation from Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers features
a verse rendition by poet Danny P. Jackson, woodcuts by famous artist
Thom Kapheim, and authentication by renowned Assyriologist Robert
D. Biggs of The Oriental Institute of The University of Chicago.
Written in cuneiform (the writing invented by Sumerians), the epic
poem was inscribed on 12 clay tablets that were discovered during
the 1850s in the library of King Assurbanipal in what is now Iraq.
Some of the tablets are missing pieces due to an invasion by the
Persians in 612 B.C., but the name of the author, Sin-leqe-unninni,
was left intact, which is extremely rare.
Another first for the epic is its employment of a literary form
that deals with universal themes such as mortality/immortality,
friendship, sorrow, nature/civilization, and hubris -- themes that
are found throughout the history of literature and fill the pages
of the modern-day comic books we all know and love. Perhaps Gilgamesh
would have looked good in red tights and a cape.
"The Epic of Gilgamesh" is available at all Barnes and Noble and
Borders bookstores, as well as Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers at (847)
526-4344 or www.bolchazy.com.
Courtesy of ARA Content, www.ARAcontent.com, e-mail: info@ARAcontent.com
EDITOR'S NOTE: For a special review copy of "The Epic of Gilgamesh,"
contact Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. They will be happy to send
you a free copy. Just send $6 for postage and handling with your
request to 1000 Brown St., Unit 101, Wauconda, IL 60084.
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